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9780231139199

Sources of Japanese Tradition

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780231139199

  • ISBN10:

    0231139195

  • Edition: 2nd
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2006-09-15
  • Publisher: Columbia Univ Pr

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Summary

Sources of Japanese Tradition, Volume 2, Second Edition is now available as an abridged two-part paperback. For Almost Fifty years, Sources of Japanese Tradition has been used as a textbook by students and scholars of philosophy, religion, cultural history, literature, and other fields in the humanities and by readers seeking an introduction to Japanese civilization. Part I of this abridgement covers the Tokugawa period, from 1600 to 1868. Part 2 begins with the Meiji period and spans all the major movements and eras to the present. Commentary by major scholars in the field is still included.

Table of Contents

Preface xxiii
Explanatory Note xxv
Chronology xxvii
Contributors xxxi
PART FIVE Japan, Asia, and the West 1(320)
35. The Meiji Restoration
Fred G. Notehelter
5(25)
Edict to Subjugate the Shogunlaugawa Yoshinobu
6(1)
Letter of Resignation of the Last Shogun
6(1)
Edict to Foreign Diplomats
7(1)
The Charter Oath
7(1)
The Constitution of 1868
8(2)
The Abolition of Feudalism and the Centralization of the Meiji State
10(2)
Memorial on the Proposal to Return the Registers
10(2)
Imperial Rescript on the Abolition of the hail
12(1)
The Leaders and Their Vision
12(18)
The Iwakura Mission
13(1)
Kido Takayoshi's Observations of Education in the United States
14(1)
Kido on the Need for Constitutional Government
14(1)
Kume Kunitake's Assessment of European Wealth and Power
15(1)
Kido's Observations on Returning from the West
16(1)
Consequences of the Iwakura Mission: Saigo and Okubo on Korea
17(1)
Letters from Saigo Thkamori to Itagaki Taisuke on the Korean Question
19(1)
Okubo Toshimichi's Reasons for Opposing the Korean Expedition
20(4)
The Meiji Emperor
24(1)
Letter from the Meiji Emperor to His People
25(1)
Comments from the Imperial Progress of 1878
27(1)
A Glimpse of the Meiji Emperor in 1872 by Takashima Tomonosuke
27(1)
Charles Lanman's Description of the Meiji Emperor in 1882
28(1)
The Meiji Emperor's Conversation with Hijikata Hisamoto on the Outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War
28(1)
A Poem by the Meiji Emperor on the Eve of the Russo-Japanese War
29(1)
36. Civilization and Enlightenment
Albert Craig
30(22)
Fukuzawa Yukichi
32(10)
Fukuzawa Yukichi's View of Civilization
34(1)
An Outline of a Theory of Civilization
34(1)
An Eneourag,einent of- Learning
41(1)
Enlightenment Thinkers of the Meirokusha: On Marriage
42(10)
Mori Arinori
42(1)
On Wives and Concubines
43(1)
Kato Hiroyuki
44(1)
Abuses of Equal Rights for Men and Women
44(1)
Fukuzawa Yukichi
45(1)
The Equal Numbers of Men and Women
45(1)
Sakatani Shiroshi
46(1)
On Concubines
46(2)
Tsuda Mamichi
48(1)
Distinguishing the Equal Rights of Husbands and Wives
48(1)
Nakamura Masanao: China Should Not Be Despised
49(1)
Japan's Debt to China
50(2)
37. Popular Rights and Constitutionalism
James Huffman
52(29)
Debating a National Assembly, 1873-1875
53(3)
Itagaki Taisuke
54(1)
Memorial on the Establishment of a Representative Assembly
54(1)
Nakamura Masanao
55(1)
On Changing the Character of the People
55(1)
Representative Assemblies and National Progress, February 1879
56(2)
Editorial from Choya shinbun
57(1)
Defining the Constitutional State, 1876-1883
58(7)
Ito Hirobumi
59(1)
Memorial on Constitutional Government
59(2)
Okuma Shigenobu
61(1)
Memorial on a National Assembly
61(1)
Chiba Takasaburo
62(1)
"The Way of the King"
62(2)
Nakae Chomin
64(1)
A Discourse by Three Drunkards on Government
64(1)
The Emergence of Political Parties
65(5)
Itagaki Taisuke
66(1)
"On Liberty"
66(1)
Fukuchi Gen'ichiro
67(1)
Teiseito Platform
67(1)
Okuma Shigenobu
68(1)
To Members of the Kaishinto
68(1)
Ozaki Yukio
69(1)
Factions and Parties
69(1)
Bestowing the Constitution on the People, 1884-1889
70(3)
Ito Hirobumi
71(1)
Reminiscences of the Drafting of the New Constitution
71(2)
Controlling the Freedom and People's Rights Movement
73(3)
Fukuda Hideko
74(1)
My Life Thus Far
74(1)
Newspaper Accounts of Arrests Under the Peace Preservation Law
75(1)
The Meiji Constitution
76(5)
The Constitution of the Empire of Japan
76(3)
Ubukata Toshiro
79(1)
"The Promulgation of the Constitution"
79(2)
38. Education in Meiji Japan
Richard Rubinger
81(36)
Views in the Early Meiji Period
88(1)
Iwakura Tomomi and Aristocratic Education
88(1)
"Admonitions to Court Nobles"
88(1)
"Further Admonitions"
89(1)
Kido Takayoshi and Ito Hirobumi on Universal Education
89(5)
Kido Takayoshi: Draft Memorial for the Ionnediate Promotion of Universal Education
90(1)
Ito Hirobumi: "Principles of National Policy"
91(1)
Fukuzawa Yukichi and Education
91(1)
An Encouragement of Learning
92(2)
The First Meiji School System
94(2)
Preamble to the Fundamental Code of Education
95(1)
The Confucian Critique
96(12)
Motoda Eifu and Emperor-Centered Education
96(1)
Great Principles of Education
96(2)
Tani Tateki's Critique of the West
98(1)
Opinion on Reform of Army Pension Law
98(1)
Nakamura Masanao's Synthesis of East and West
99(1)
"Past–Present, East–West: One Morality"
99(4)
Mon Arinori and the Later Meiji School System
103(1)
"Essentials of Educational Administration"
104(1)
Military-Style Physical Training
105(1)
Inoue Kowashi and Patriotic Training
106(1)
Public Education and the National Substance
107(1)
"Plan to Defend the National Interest"
107(1)
The Imperial Rescript on Education
108(2)
The Opening
108(2)
The Extended Meaning of the Rescript
110(1)
Teachers and Reform from Below
110(1)
"Reducing Interference in Textbook Selection"
111(1)
State Control over Textbooks
111(4)
Kikuchi Dairoku and the Textbook Scandal of 1903
111(1)
Japanese Education
112(3)
The Education of Women in the Meiji Period
115(3)
Progress of Female Education in Meiji
115(2)
39. Nationalism and Pan-Asianism
117(31)
State Shinto
Helen Hardacre
118(9)
The Unity of Rites and Rule
121(1)
The Idea of Shinto as a National Teaching
122(1)
Memorial
122(1)
The Divinity of the Emperor
122(1)
From Article 3 of the Meiji Constitution
123(1)
Kato Genchi: "Mikadoism"
123(1)
The Patriotic Meaning of Shrines
124(1)
"A Policy for the Unification of the National Faith"
124(1)
State Shinto in the Colonies of Imperial Japan
125(1)
On the Refusal to Worship at Shrines
125(1)
The Emperor's Renunciation of His Divinity
126(1)
Tokutomi Soho: A Japanese Nationalist's View of the West and Asia
Fred G. Notehelfer
127(1)
The Early Meiji Vision
128(1)
On Wealth and Power
129(1)
Youth and Revolution
129(1)
On Economic Versus Military Power
130(1)
Advocate of Freedom and People's Rights
130(1)
Nationalism
131(1)
Supporting the Imperial State and Military Expansion
132(1)
Rejoicing over Victory in the Sino-Japanese War
133(1)
Resentment Resulting from the Triple Intervention
133(1)
Support for the Imperial State, Criticism of Taisho Society
133(1)
Worship of the Imperial House
134(1)
Rejecting the West and Withdrawing from the League of Nations
134(1)
Justification for the China War
135(1)
American—Japanese Relations in 1941
136(1)
Comments on the Imperial Rescript for War with Great Britain and the United States
136(1)
Analyzing Defeat
138(1)
Final Assessment
139(1)
Okakura Kakuzo: Aesthetic Pan-Asianism
Aida Yuen Wong
139(5)
Mc Ideals of the Last
140(3)
Tea, the Cup of Humanity
143(1)
Yanagi Muneyoshi and the Kwanghwa Gate in Seoul, Korea
Yongho Ch'oe
144(4)
For a Korean Architecture About to Be host
145(3)
40. The High Tide of Prewar Liberalism
Arthur E. Tiedemann
148(64)
Democracy at Home
154(54)
Minobe Tatsukichil The Legal Foundation for Liberal Government
154(1)
Lectures on the Constitution
155(8)
Yoshino Sakuzo: Democracy as minpon shugi
163(1)
"On the Meaning of Constitutional Government and the Methods by Which It Can Be Perfected"
164(17)
Ishibashi Tanzan: A Liberal Business Journalist
181(1)
"The Fantasy of Greater Japanism"
181(1)
"Before Demanding the Abolition of Racial Discrimination"
190(1)
"The Only Method for Proper Guidance of Thought Is to Allow Absolute Freedom of Speech"
191(2)
Kiyosawa Kiyoshi: Why Liberalism?
193(1)
Present-Day Japan
193(1)
Why Liberalism?
195(4)
Ienaga Saburo: The Formation of a Liberal
199(1)
A Historian's Progress, Step by Step
200(8)
Peaceful Cooperation Abroad
208(4)
Shidehara Kijuro: Conciliatory Diplomacy
208(1)
A Rapprochement with China
208(2)
Yamamuro Sobun: Call for a Peaceful Japan
210(1)
Speech
210(2)
41. Socialism and the Left
Andrew Barshay
212(48)
The Early Socialist Movement
213(4)
Katavama Sen
214(1)
A Summons to the Workers
244
Anarchism
217(7)
Kotoku Sliusui
218(1)
"The Change in My Thought" (on Universal Suffrage)
218(4)
Kagawa Toyohiko
222(1)
Before the Dawn
223(1)
Socialism and the Left
224(15)
Osugi Sakae
224(1)
Autobiography
225(10)
Kaneko Fumiko
235(1)
"What Made Me Do What I Did?"
236(3)
Marxism
239(11)
The Debate About Japanese Capitalism
240(1)
Kawakami Hajime
240(1)
A Letter from Prison
242(1)
Concerning Marxism
243(2)
Yamada Moritaro
245(1)
Analysis of Japanese Capitalism
246(2)
Uno Kozo
248(1)
The Essence of Capital
249(1)
Marxist Cultural Criticism
250(5)
Tosaka Jun
251(1)
The Japanese Ideology
251(4)
The Tenko Phenomenon
255(5)
Letter to Our Fellow Defendants
256(4)
42. The Rise of Revolutionary Nationalism
Marius Jansen
260(28)
Japan and Asia
261(4)
An Anniversary Statement by the Amur Society
263(2)
Agitation by Assassination
265(3)
Asahi Heigo
266(1)
Call for a New "Restoration"
267(1)
The Plight of the Countryside
268(3)
Gondo Seikyo
269(1)
The Cap Between the Privileged Classes and the Commoners
270(1)
Kita Ikki and the Reform Wing of Ultranationalism
271(5)
An Outline Plan for the Reorganization of Japan
272(4)
The Conservative Reaffirmation
276(8)
Fundamentals of Our National Polity
277(7)
Watsuji Tetsuro
284(4)
The Way of the Japanese Subject
285(3)
43. Empire and War
Peter Duns
288(35)
The Impact of World War I: A Conflict Between Defenders and Opponents of the Status Quo
291(3)
Konoe Fumimaro
291(1)
"Against a Pacifism Centered on England and America"
291(3)
A Plan to Occupy Manchuria
294(2)
Ishihara Kanji
294(1)
Personal Opinion on the Manchuria—Mongolia Problem
294(2)
The Economic Need for Expansion
296(3)
Hashimoto Kingoro
296(1)
Addresses to Young Men
297(1)
Konoe Fumimaro
298(1)
Radio Address
298(1)
National Mobilization
299(5)
Army Ministry
299(1)
On the Basic Meaning of National Defense and Its Intensification
299(2)
Konoe Fumimaro
301(1)
Concerning the New National Structure
301(2)
The Imperial Rule Assistance Association
303(1)
Confronting the Crisis
303(1)
Spiritual Mobilization
304(1)
Ministry of Education
304(1)
The Way of Subjects
304(1)
Economic Mobilization
305(3)
Ryu Shintaro
305(1)
Japan's Economic Reorganization
306(2)
The Greater East Asia War
308(1)
Arita Hachiro
308(1)
The Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere
308(1)
The Decision for War with the United States
309(14)
Statement by Prime Minister Tojo Hideki
310(1)
Statement by Foreign Minisier Togo Shigenori on Japanese—American Negotiations
310(1)
Statement by Privy Council President Hara Yoshimichi
311(1)
Concluding Remarks by Prime Minister Tojo Hideki
312(1)
The War's Goals
312(1)
Draft of Basic Plan for Establishment of Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere
312(4)
The Greater East Asia Conference
316(1)
Inaugural Address to the Greater East Asia Conference
316(1)
Defeat
317(1)
Imperial Rescript on Surrender
317(4)
PART SIX Postwar Japan 321(92)
44. The Occupation Years, 1945-1952
Marlene Mayo
323(59)
Potsdam Declaration
324(1)
Initial Official Policies, American and Japanese
325(5)
Initial U.S. Policy for Postsurrender Japan: Required Reforms
325(1)
General MacArthur's Statement to the Japanese Government
326(1)
Revised Report to the Diet and People by the Shidehara Cabinet
325(5)
A New Basic Document: The 1947: Constitution
330(7)
The New Constitution
333(4)
Introducing a New Civil Code
337(3)
The Revised Civil Code
338(1)
The Revised Ennili Registration Law
339(1)
The New Educational System
340(3)
The School Education Act
341(1)
The Fundamental Law of Education
342(1)
Labor Unions
343(1)
The Labor Standards Law
343(1)
Rural Land Reform
344(6)
Rural Land Reform Directive
343(3)
Views of Yoshida Shigeru
346(4)
Economic Stabilization and Reconstruction
350(11)
Postwar Reconstruction of the Japanese Economy
350(8)
Japan's First White Paper on the Economy
358(2)
Revised U.S. Policy for Occupied Japan
360(1)
Reconstructing Japan as a Nation of Peace and Culture
361(5)
Morito Tatsuo
361(1)
"The Construction of a Peaceful Nation"
362(3)
Yokota Kisaburo
365(1)
On Peace
365(1)
Regaining Sovereignty in a Bipolar World
366(6)
Negotiating a Formal Peace Settlement
367(1)
Treaty of Peace Between the Allied Powers and Japan
368(3)
Bilateral Security Treaty Between the United States of America and Japan
371(1)
Some Japanese Views of the War
372(10)
Kurihara Sadako
372(1)
A Dissident Poet's Critique of War
373(1)
Oe Kenzaburo
374(1)
Growing Up During the Occupation
375(2)
Tanaka Kotaro
377(1)
In Search of Truth and Peace
378(4)
45. Democracy and High Growth
Andrew Gordon
382(35)
The Movement Against the Separate Treaty and the U.S.—Japan Military Alliance
385(4)
Declaration of the Peace Problems Discussion Group on Questions Surrounding an Agreement on Peace
385(3)
Nakasone Yasuhiro: A Critical View of the Postwar Constitution
388(1)
The "MacArthur" Constitution
388(1)
The Government's View of the Economy in 1956: "The 'postwar' is over"
389(2)
Declaration of the Director of the Economic Planning Agency on the Occasion of the Publication of the White Paper on the Economy
390(1)
The Transformation of the Postwar Monarchy
391(2)
The Emperor System of the Masses
391(2)
Two Views of the Security Treaty Crisis of 1960
393(7)
Maruyama Masao
394(1)
"8/15 and 3/19"
394(3)
Yoshimoto Takaaki
397(1)
"The End of a Fictitious System"
397(3)
The Consumer Revolution in Postwar Japan, 1960
400(2)
The Economic Planning Agency's White Paper on the People's Livelihood
400(2)
The Economic Planning Agency's New Long-Range Economic Plan of Japan, 1961-1970
402(3)
The Income-Doubling Plan
403(2)
Environmental Activism in Postwar Japan: Minamata Disease
405(1)
We Citizens: Sit-in Strike Declaration
405(1)
Bulldozing the Archipelago: The Politics of Economic Growth
406(2)
Epilogue of Building a New Japan
407(1)
The Philosophy of Japanese Labor Management in the High-Growth Era
408(2)
Twenty Years of Labor Management
409(1)
The Japanese Middle Class at the End of the Twentieth Century
410(7)
"Farewell, Mainstream Consciousness!"
411(2)
PART SEVEN Aspects of the Modern Experience 413(170)
46. The New Religions
Helen Hardacre
417(29)
Tenrikyo
421(10)
The Tip of the Writing Brush
425(4)
Songs for the Service
429(1)
The Divine Directions
430(1)
Omoto
431(7)
Deguchi Nao
433(1)
Divine Revelations
433(2)
Deguchi Onisaburo
435(1)
Stories from the Spiritual World
435(1)
Divine Signposts
436(2)
Soka gakkai
438(9)
Makiguchi Tsunesaburo
440(1)
What Is Religious Value?
440(1)
The Relations Among Religion and Science, Morality, and Education
441(2)
Toda Josei
443(1)
"On the Nature of Life"
443(2)
Ikeda Daisaku
445(1)
Health and Welfare
445(1)
47. Japan and the World in Cultural Debate
446(26)
Uchimura Kanzo
447(5)
How I Became a Christian
448(2)
The Disrespect Incident
450(1)
"Two J's"
451(1)
Natsume Soseki
452(3)
"My Individualism"
452(3)
Nishida Kitani
455(4)
The Problem of Japanese Culture
456(3)
Endo Shusaku
Van Gessel
459(3)
"My Coming into Faith"
459(3)
Mishima Yukio
Donald Keene
462(4)
"The National Characteristics of Japanese Culture"
462(4)
Oe Kenzaburo
466(6)
"Japan, the Ambiguous, and Myself"
467(5)
48. Gender Politics and Feminism
Brett de Bary
472(33)
Gender and Modernization
473(15)
Magazines for Women's Education
474(1)
Shimizu Toyoko: "The Broken Ring"
475(7)
Women and Labor
482(1)
Yamakawa Kikue: Record of the Generations of Women
482(4)
Hiratsuka Raicho and the Bluestocking Society
486(1)
"In the Beginning Woman Was the Sun"
487(1)
"New Woman"
487(1)
Postwar Japanese Feminism
488(17)
Aoki Yayoi and Ecofeminism
490(1)
Imperialist Sentiments and the Privilege of Aggression
490(2)
Matsui Yayori and Asian Migrant Women in Japan
492(1)
The Victimization of Asian Migrant Women in Japan
493(2)
Ueno Chizuko and the Cultural Context of Japanese Feminism
495(1)
Are the Japanese Feminine? Some Problems of Japanese Feminism in Its Cultural Context
495(6)
Saito Chiyo and Japanese Feminism
501(1)
What Is Japanese Feminism?
501(4)
49. Thinking with the Past: History Writing in Modern Japan
Carol Cluck
505(78)
New Histories in Meiji Japan
507(8)
Taguchi Ukichi
509(1)
A Short History of Japanese Civilization
510(1)
Shigeno Yasutsugu
511(1)
"Those Who Engage in the Study of History Must Be Impartial and Fair-Minded in Spirit"
512(1)
Kume Kunitake
513(1)
"The Abuses of textual Criticism in Historical Study"
514(1)
Marxist History Writing
515(5)
Lectures on the History of the Development of Japanese Capitalism
517(2)
The Association of Historical Studies
519(1)
Draft of the Charter of the Association of Historical Studies
519(1)
Writing About the Meiji Restoration
520(12)
Tokutomi Soho
521(1)
Future Japan
522(1)
Noro Eitaro
523(1)
History of the Development of Japanese Capitalism
524(1)
Nakamura Masanori
524(1)
"The Meaning of the Meiji Restoration Today"
525(1)
Banno Junji
526(1)
"Meiji Japan's Nation-Building Process"
527(1)
Bito Masahide
527(1)
What Is the Edo Period?
528(1)
Shiba Ryotaro
529(1)
The Mountain Pass
529(2)
A High-School History Textbook
531(1)
Modern Japanese History
531(1)
Alternative Histories
532(11)
Ifa Fuyu
533(1)
Old Ryukyu
534(1)
Yanagita Kunio
535(1)
On Folklore Studies
535(2)
Takamure Itsue
537(1)
History of Women
537(6)
Japanese History in Comparison
543(10)
Maruyama Masao
544(1)
"The Structure of Matsurigoto: The Basso Ostinato of Japanese Political Life"
544(4)
Irokawa Daikichi
548(1)
The Culture of the Meiji Period
549(2)
Yasumaru Yoshio
551(1)
"National Religion, the Imperial Institution, and Invented Tradition: The Western Stimulus"
551(2)
The Asia-Pacific War in History and Memory
553(22)
Maruyama Masao
554(1)
"The Logic and Psychology of Ultranationalism"
555(1)
Ienaga Saburo
556(1)
The Pacific War
557(1)
The Ienaga Textbook Trials
559(2)
Oe Kenzaburo
561(1)
Hiroshima Notes
562(1)
Fujiwara Akira
563(1)
How to View the Nanjing Incident
564(1)
Kobayashi Yoshinori
565(1)
On War
566(3)
Ishizaka Kei
569(1)
A Just War
569(4)
Twentieth-Century Design Stamps
573(2)
Rethinking the Nation
575(8)
Amino Yoshihiko
577(1)
"Deconstructing 'Japan'"
578(2)
Arano Yasunori and Colleagues
580(1)
The History of Japan in Asia
580(3)
Bibliography 583(12)
Index 595

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