Readers should be thankful that the most thorough history of Sony yet written comes from a writer steeped in Japanese culture rather than in business. Nathan, a professor of Japanese cultural studies at UC-Santa Barbara, gives a human dimension to the Japanese electronics giant, especially to its cofounders, Masaru Ibuka (the dreamer) and Akio Morita (the pragmatist), who, acco...
Readers should be thankful that the most thorough history of Sony yet written comes from a writer steeped in Japanese culture rather than in business. Nathan, a professor of Japanese cultural studies at UC-Santa Barbara, gives a human dimension to the Japanese electronics giant, especially to its cofounders, Masaru Ibuka (the dreamer) and Akio Morita (the pragmatist), who, according to Ibuka's son, were linked by a bond of friendship and collegiality that made them "closer than lovers." Nathan had the full cooperation of Sony, including access to top officials and archives. Yet this is no puff-piece, but rather a fascinating account of how Sony succeeded despite such setbacks as the failure of Betamax and the disastrous $4.7 billion purchase of Columbia Pictures. At the center of the story are Ibuka and Morita, who strove to make Sony accepted and respected beyond Japan, especially in the U.S. Some of the most absorbing--and even poignant--sections concern the cultural divide between Japan and America. Nathan focuses on the interpersonal relationships among the company's leaders to examine what made the company tick. In addition to the interplay between Ibuka and Morita, Nathan documents the rise of Norio Ohga as the successor to the cofounders and also devotes a considerable amount of time to the relationship between Ohga and Mickey Schulhof, the highest-ranking American Sony officer before he was fired by the current Sony president Nobuyuki Idei. By mixing interviews with Sony executives with his own insights, Nathan provides readers with a thorough and entertaining history of the company that rose out of the ashes of WWII to embody Japan's postwar resurrection.
作者简介
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John Nathan is the author of the definitive biography of the novelist Yukio Mishima & has translated the novels of both Mishima & the Nobel laureate Kenzaburo Oe into English. He is an Emmy Award-winning filmmaker & lives in Santa Barbara, California.
目录
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Acknowledgments
Preface
1 The Founding Fathers: In search of a Postwar dream
2 Ibuka the muse: from "Talking paper" to trimitron
3 Akio Morita: discovering america
4 Morita the dazzler: the man behind the mask
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Acknowledgments
Preface
1 The Founding Fathers: In search of a Postwar dream
2 Ibuka the muse: from "Talking paper" to trimitron
3 Akio Morita: discovering america
4 Morita the dazzler: the man behind the mask
5 Sony's first American: lessons in logic from Harvey Schein
6 Maestro Ohga: The art of profit
7 Extending the family: The rise of Mickey Schulhof
8 One for chairman Akio: the Columbia pictures acquisition
9 Hollywood Continued: Tailspin
10 Ohga and Schulhof: A tale of love and hubris
11 Idei the heretic: Empire's end
Index
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国内各个卖书网站包括豆瓣读书都只会标示中文版的出版年份而从不敢标示原版的出版年份。1999年的老故事了,除了骚尼的起源外,我更想看到关于PS2时代的横扫千军、LED电视的窘境、MD的死亡、索尼-索爱-索尼的手机业务、Walkman vs. iPod、PSP与PS Vita的迥异命运、PS3的沉浮录、...
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还没人写过短评呢