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9780691031835

The Geography of Power in Medieval Japan

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780691031835

  • ISBN10:

    0691031835

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1992-06-01
  • Publisher: Princeton Univ Pr
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Summary

Cornerstone of the landholding system underpinning elite power, the estate, or shoen, has long been recognized as the central economic institution of medieval Japan. Thomas Keirstead argues that the estate system constituted more than a type of landownership. In rent rolls, land registers, maps, and other data describing individual estates, he discerns a cultural system, a framework that produced and shaped meaning for estate residents and proprietors. As his discussion of peasant uprisings reveals, the system did not define a stable, closed structure, but was built upon contested terrain.
This book draws on the works of Foucault, de Certeau, and Geertz, among others, to illuminate the presuppositions about space and society that underwrote estate holding. It traces how the system reordered the social and physical landscape, clearing the ground for shoen and establishing the terms that specified identity for both rulers and subjects. Estate holders, seeking to counter the fluid movement of populations across estate boundaries, pressed into service a social distinction between "peasants" and "wanderers." Peasant rebels made use of the fiction that the estate comprised a natural community in order to resist proprietorial exactions. In all these instances, Keirstead contends, the estate system reveals its governing logic: social and political divisions were articulated in spatial terms; power was exercised (and contested) through geography.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
In Go-Sanjo's Archive: Discovering the System of the Estatesp. 3
Estates and the Estate Systemp. 10
Tracing the Breakp. 14
Go-Sanjo's Archivep. 17
Hyakusho and the Rhetoric of Identityp. 25
Defining the Subjectp. 26
The Lineaments of Identityp. 30
A Wandering Statep. 34
Inventing the Hyakushop. 38
Split Subjectsp. 44
Official Transcripts: Myo, Maps, Surveys, and the Entitlement of the Estatep. 46
Myo: Points of Contentionp. 47
Bordersp. 51
Taking the Measure of the Landp. 57
Gatheringp. 62
Myo and Hyakushop. 66
Orderly Places, Contested Spacesp. 69
The Theater of Protestp. 72
Rebellionp. 74
The Rituals of Rebellionp. 83
Petitioningp. 87
Hyakusho moshijop. 90
Closing in on the Subjectp. 94
Conclusion: The Debate about Declinep. 98
Notesp. 119
Glossaryp. 157
Bibliographyp. 165
Indexp. 179
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.

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