Toward the Meiji revolution : the search for "civilization" in nineteenth-century Japan = ["Ishin kakumei" eno michi : "bunmei" o motometa jūkyūseiki nihon] / Karube Tadashi ; translated by David Noble.
2019
JA84.J3 K36413 2019 (Mapit)
Available at General Collection
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Details
Title
Toward the Meiji revolution : the search for "civilization" in nineteenth-century Japan = ["Ishin kakumei" eno michi : "bunmei" o motometa jūkyūseiki nihon] / Karube Tadashi ; translated by David Noble.
Uniform Title
"Ishin kakumei" e no michi. English
Variant Title
Japanese title in colophon: Ishin kakumei e no michi
Edition
First English edition.
ISBN
9784866580593 (hardcover)
4866580593 (hardcover)
4866580593 (hardcover)
Published
Tokyo, Japan : Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture, 2019.
Language
English
Language Note
In English with original Japanese title on colophon and jacket.
Description
255 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 22 cm.
Call Number
JA84.J3 K36413 2019
Dewey Decimal Classification
952.031
Summary
"In 2018 Japan marked the 150th anniversary of the collapse of the Tokugawa shogunate and the establishment of a new government under Emperor Meiji. This was not simply a transfer of political authority but instead signaled revolutionary transformation in Japan, including the abolition of the domains and the formation of a modern nation-state in the years that followed. A period of radical social change was ushered in, with the abolition of the class system, the introduction of Western thought and technology, the development of mass media, and the establishment of constitutional government. The impact on Japan of diplomatic, economic, and cultural pressure from the United States and other Western powers from 1853 onward was previously thought to be the immediate catalyst of this 'Meiji Revolution.' But Japan's modern transformation was rooted in a much deeper process of social and intellectual development that gradually unfolded throughout the latter half of the Tokugawa period. Surveying a diverse group of thinkers spanning the Tokugawa and early Meiji years -- Ogyū Sorai, Yamagata Bantō, Motoori Norinaga, Rai San'yō, Fukuzawa Yukichi, Takekoshi Yosaburō, and others -- this ambitious book liberates modern Japanese history from the stereotypical narrative of 'Japanese spirit and Western technique,' offering a detailed examination of the elements in Tokugawa thought and culture that spurred Japan to articulate its own unique conception of civilization during the course of the nineteenth century." -- From the dustjacket.
Note
Originally published in Japan by Shinchōsha, 2017, under title: "Ishin kakumei" e no michi.
Translated from Japanese.
Translated from Japanese.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 241-248).
Added Author
Series
Japan library (Shuppan Bunka Sangyō Shinkō Zaidan)
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Meiji restoration or Meiji revolution?
The long revolution
History in reverse
The Voltaire of Osaka
Is commerce evil?
The age of economics
Another side of Motoori Norinaga
A new cosmology and the concept of Ikioi
Ikioi as the motive force in history
A farewell to the Hōken system
The advent of "civilization".
The long revolution
History in reverse
The Voltaire of Osaka
Is commerce evil?
The age of economics
Another side of Motoori Norinaga
A new cosmology and the concept of Ikioi
Ikioi as the motive force in history
A farewell to the Hōken system
The advent of "civilization".