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The making of modern Japan / Marius B. Jansen.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge, Mass. : Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2000Description: xvi, 871 pages, 40 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0674003349
  • 9780674003347
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 952.095
LOC classification:
  • DS871. J35 2000
Contents:
Part 1. Sekigahara -- 1. The Sengoku Background -- 2. The New Sengoku Daimyo -- 3. The Unifiers: Oda Nobunaga -- 4. Toyotomi Hideyoshi -- 5. Azuchi-Momoyama Culture -- 6. The Spoils of Sekigahara: Tokugawa Ieyasu -- Part 2. The Tokugawa State -- 1. Taking Control -- 2. Ranking the Daimyo -- 3. The Structure of the Tokugawa Bakufu -- 4. The Domains -- 5. Center and Periphery: Bakufu-Han Relations -- 6. The Tokugawa "State" -- part 3. Foreign Relations -- 1. The Setting -- 2. Relations with Korea -- 3. The Countries of the West -- 4. To the Seclusion Decrees -- 5. The Dutch at Nagasaki -- 6. Relations with China -- 7. The Question of the "Closed Country" -- part 4. Status Groups -- 1. The Imperial Court -- 2. The Ruling Samurai Class -- 3. Village Life -- 4. Townsmen (chonin>) -- 5. Subcaste Japanese -- 6. Status and Function -- part 5. Urbanization and Communications -- 1. The sankin-kotai System -- 2. Communication Networks -- 3. Domain Castle Towns -- 4. Edo: The Central Magnet -- part 6. The Development of a Mass Culture -- 1. Civilizing the Ruling Class -- 2. Books and Literacy -- 3. Osaka and Kyoto -- 4. Genroku Culture -- part 7. Education, Thought, and Religion -- 1. Education -- 2. The Diffusion of Confucianism -- 3. Scholars and Scholarship -- 4. The Problem of China -- 5. Ethnic Nativism -- 6. Dutch, or Western, Learning (rangaku) -- 7. Religion -- 8. Popular Preaching -- part 8. Change, Protest, and Reform -- 1. Population -- 2. Rulers and Ruled -- 3. Popular Protest -- 4. Bakufu Responses -- part 9. The Opening To the World -- 1. Russia -- 2. Western Europe -- 3. News from China -- 4. The Perry Mission -- 5. The War Within -- 6. Defense Intellectuals -- part 10. The Tokugawa Fall -- 1. The Narrative -- 2. The Open Ports -- 3. Experiencing the West -- 4. The Other Japanese -- 5. The Restoration Remembered -- 6. Why Did the Tokugawa Fall? -- part 11. The Meiji Revolution -- 1. Background -- 2. Steps toward Consensus -- 3. Toward Centralization -- 4. Failed Cultural Revolution -- 5. Wisdom throughout the World -- 6. The Breakup of the Restoration Coalition -- 7. Winners and Losers -- part 12. Building the Meiji State -- 1. Matsukata Economics -- 2. The Struggle for Political Participation -- 3. Ito Hirobumi and the Meiji Constitution -- 4. Yamagata Aritomo and the Imperial Army -- 5. Mori Arinori and Meiji Education -- 6. Summary: The Meiji Leaders -- part 13. Imperial Japan -- 1. The Election -- 2. Politics under the Meiji Constitution -- 3. Foreign Policy and Treaty Reform -- 4. War with China -- 5. The Diplomacy of Imperialism -- 6. The Annexation of Korea -- 7. State and Society -- part 14. Meiji Culture -- 1. Restore Antiquity! -- 2. Civilization and Enlightenment! Be a Success! -- 3. Christianity -- 4. Politics and Culture -- 5. The State and Culture -- part 15. Japan Between the Wars -- 1. Steps toward Party Government -- 2. Japan in World Affairs -- 3. Economic Change -- part 16. Taisho Culture and Society -- 1. Education and Change -- 2. The Law Faculty of Tokyo Imperial University -- 3. Taisho Youth: From "Civilization" to "Culture" -- 4. Women -- 5. Labor -- 6. Changes in the Village -- 7. Urban Culture -- 8. The Interwar Years -- part 17. The China War -- 1. Manchurian Beginnings: The Incident -- 2. Manchukuo: Eastward the Course of Empire -- 3. Soldiers and Politics -- 4. The Sacralization of Kokutai and the Return to Japan -- 5. The Economy: Recovery and Resources -- 6. Tenko: The Conversion of the Left -- 7. Planning for a Managed Economy -- 8. War with China and Konoe's "New Order in Asia" -- part 18. The Pacific War -- 1. Reading World Politics from Tokyo -- 2. Attempts to Reconfigure the Meiji Landscape -- 3. The Washington Talks -- 4. The Japanese People and the War -- 5. The Road to Hiroshima and Nagasaki -- 6. The Pacific War in the History of the Twentieth Century -- 7. Dismantling the Meiji State -- part 19. The Yoshida Years -- 1. The Social Context of Postsurrender Japan -- 2. Reform and Reconstruction -- 3. Planning for Recovery -- 4. Politics and the Road to San Francisco -- 5. The San Francisco System -- 6. Intellectuals and the Yoshida Structure -- 7. Postwar Culture -- part 20. Japan Since Independence -- 1. Politics and the 1955 System -- 2. The Rise to Economic Superpower -- 3. Social Change -- 4. The Examined Life -- 5. Japan in World Affairs -- 6. Japan at Millennium's End.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 952.095 JAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A250359B

Includes bibliographical references (pages 795-842) and index.

Part 1. Sekigahara -- 1. The Sengoku Background -- 2. The New Sengoku Daimyo -- 3. The Unifiers: Oda Nobunaga -- 4. Toyotomi Hideyoshi -- 5. Azuchi-Momoyama Culture -- 6. The Spoils of Sekigahara: Tokugawa Ieyasu -- Part 2. The Tokugawa State -- 1. Taking Control -- 2. Ranking the Daimyo -- 3. The Structure of the Tokugawa Bakufu -- 4. The Domains -- 5. Center and Periphery: Bakufu-Han Relations -- 6. The Tokugawa "State" -- part 3. Foreign Relations -- 1. The Setting -- 2. Relations with Korea -- 3. The Countries of the West -- 4. To the Seclusion Decrees -- 5. The Dutch at Nagasaki -- 6. Relations with China -- 7. The Question of the "Closed Country" -- part 4. Status Groups -- 1. The Imperial Court -- 2. The Ruling Samurai Class -- 3. Village Life -- 4. Townsmen (chonin>) -- 5. Subcaste Japanese -- 6. Status and Function -- part 5. Urbanization and Communications -- 1. The sankin-kotai System -- 2. Communication Networks -- 3. Domain Castle Towns -- 4. Edo: The Central Magnet -- part 6. The Development of a Mass Culture -- 1. Civilizing the Ruling Class -- 2. Books and Literacy -- 3. Osaka and Kyoto -- 4. Genroku Culture -- part 7. Education, Thought, and Religion -- 1. Education -- 2. The Diffusion of Confucianism -- 3. Scholars and Scholarship -- 4. The Problem of China -- 5. Ethnic Nativism -- 6. Dutch, or Western, Learning (rangaku) -- 7. Religion -- 8. Popular Preaching -- part 8. Change, Protest, and Reform -- 1. Population -- 2. Rulers and Ruled -- 3. Popular Protest -- 4. Bakufu Responses -- part 9. The Opening To the World -- 1. Russia -- 2. Western Europe -- 3. News from China -- 4. The Perry Mission -- 5. The War Within -- 6. Defense Intellectuals -- part 10. The Tokugawa Fall -- 1. The Narrative -- 2. The Open Ports -- 3. Experiencing the West -- 4. The Other Japanese -- 5. The Restoration Remembered -- 6. Why Did the Tokugawa Fall? -- part 11. The Meiji Revolution -- 1. Background -- 2. Steps toward Consensus -- 3. Toward Centralization -- 4. Failed Cultural Revolution -- 5. Wisdom throughout the World -- 6. The Breakup of the Restoration Coalition -- 7. Winners and Losers -- part 12. Building the Meiji State -- 1. Matsukata Economics -- 2. The Struggle for Political Participation -- 3. Ito Hirobumi and the Meiji Constitution -- 4. Yamagata Aritomo and the Imperial Army -- 5. Mori Arinori and Meiji Education -- 6. Summary: The Meiji Leaders -- part 13. Imperial Japan -- 1. The Election -- 2. Politics under the Meiji Constitution -- 3. Foreign Policy and Treaty Reform -- 4. War with China -- 5. The Diplomacy of Imperialism -- 6. The Annexation of Korea -- 7. State and Society -- part 14. Meiji Culture -- 1. Restore Antiquity! -- 2. Civilization and Enlightenment! Be a Success! -- 3. Christianity -- 4. Politics and Culture -- 5. The State and Culture -- part 15. Japan Between the Wars -- 1. Steps toward Party Government -- 2. Japan in World Affairs -- 3. Economic Change -- part 16. Taisho Culture and Society -- 1. Education and Change -- 2. The Law Faculty of Tokyo Imperial University -- 3. Taisho Youth: From "Civilization" to "Culture" -- 4. Women -- 5. Labor -- 6. Changes in the Village -- 7. Urban Culture -- 8. The Interwar Years -- part 17. The China War -- 1. Manchurian Beginnings: The Incident -- 2. Manchukuo: Eastward the Course of Empire -- 3. Soldiers and Politics -- 4. The Sacralization of Kokutai and the Return to Japan -- 5. The Economy: Recovery and Resources -- 6. Tenko: The Conversion of the Left -- 7. Planning for a Managed Economy -- 8. War with China and Konoe's "New Order in Asia" -- part 18. The Pacific War -- 1. Reading World Politics from Tokyo -- 2. Attempts to Reconfigure the Meiji Landscape -- 3. The Washington Talks -- 4. The Japanese People and the War -- 5. The Road to Hiroshima and Nagasaki -- 6. The Pacific War in the History of the Twentieth Century -- 7. Dismantling the Meiji State -- part 19. The Yoshida Years -- 1. The Social Context of Postsurrender Japan -- 2. Reform and Reconstruction -- 3. Planning for Recovery -- 4. Politics and the Road to San Francisco -- 5. The San Francisco System -- 6. Intellectuals and the Yoshida Structure -- 7. Postwar Culture -- part 20. Japan Since Independence -- 1. Politics and the 1955 System -- 2. The Rise to Economic Superpower -- 3. Social Change -- 4. The Examined Life -- 5. Japan in World Affairs -- 6. Japan at Millennium's End.

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