TY - BOOK AU - Jansen,Marius B. TI - The making of modern Japan SN - 0674003349 AV - DS871. J35 2000 U1 - 952.095 PY - 2000/// CY - Cambridge, Mass. PB - Belknap Press of Harvard University Press KW - Japan KW - History KW - Tokugawa period, 1600-1868 KW - Meiji period, 1868-1912 N1 - 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 ER -