The Human Tradition in Modern Japan

The Human Tradition in Modern Japan

by Anne Walthall
The Human Tradition in Modern Japan

The Human Tradition in Modern Japan

by Anne Walthall

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Overview

The Human Tradition in Modern Japan is a collection of short biographies of ordinary Japanese men and women, most of them unknown outside their family and locality, whose lives collectively span the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Their stories present a counterweight to the prevailing stereotypes, providing students with depictions of real people through the records they have left-records that detail experiences and aspirations.

The Human Tradition in Modern Japan offers a human-scale perspective that focuses on individuals, reconstitutes the meaning of people's experiences as they lived through them, and puts a human face on history. It skillfully bridges the divides between the sexes, between the local and the national, and between rural and urban, as well as spanning crucial moments in the history of modern Japan.

The Human Tradition in Modern Japan is an excellent resource for courses on Japanese history, East Asian history, and peoples and cultures of Japan.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781461665519
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 01/01/2002
Series: The Human Tradition around the World series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 241
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Anne Walthall teaches Japanese history at the University of California, Irvine.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction: On the Trail of People in the Past
Part 2 I: The World of Shogun, Samurai, and Court, 1600-1868
Chapter 3 Shinanomiya Tsuneko: Portrait of a Court Lady
Chapter 4 Mori Yoshiki: Samurai Government Officer
Part 5 II: The Meiji Restoration and the Transformation of State and Society
Chapter 6 Nishimiya Hide: Turning Palace Arts into Marketable Skills
Chapter 7 The Ishizaka of Notsuda: A family in Transition
Part 8 III: Building the Modern State
Chapter 9 Hatoyama Haruko (1861-1938): Ambitious Woman
Chapter 10 Jahana Noboru: Okinawan Activist and Scholar
Chapter 11 Kinoshita Yoshio: Revolutionizing Service on Japan's National Railroads
Part 12 IV: Twentieth-Century Vicissitudes
Chapter 13 Matsuura Isami (1880-1962): A Modern Patriarch in Rural Japan
Chapter 14 Yoshiya Nobuko: Out and Outspoken in Practice and Prose
Chapter 15 Takahashi Masao (1901-1995): Flexible Marxist
Part 16 V: World War II and the Postwar World
Chapter 17 Yokoi Shoichi: When a Soldier Finally Returns Home
Chapter 18 Misora Hibari: The Postwar Myth of Mournful Tears and Sake
Chapter 19 Index

What People are Saying About This

John W. Dower

The Human Tradition in Modern Japan is a splendid antidote to those tedious tomes that perpetuate the myth of 'the Japanese' as a peculiarly homogenous, harmonious, and culture-bound people.--John W. Dower Elting E. Morison Professor of History at MIT and author of Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War II

F. G. Notehelfer

This book demonstrates that by exploring the experiences of everyday Japanese we can often learn more about the history and people of Japan than by concentrating on the powerful, wealthy, and influential. It is often in the lives of the ordinary that we glimpse the extraordinary. It is also here that we sense most clearly the ties that unite us all as human beings.--F. G. Notehelfer Professor of Japanese History, UCLA

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