New Directions in the Study of Meiji Japan
Edited by Helen Hardacre. With Adam L. Kern
Biographical note
Helen Hardacre, Ph.D. (1980) in History of Religions, University of Chicago, is Reischauer Institute Professor of Japanese Society and Religions, Harvard University. She has published extensively on modern Japanese religious history, including new religions movements and religion and the state.
Adam L. Kern is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, Harvard University.
Adam L. Kern is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, Harvard University.
Readership
Everyone intersted in Meiji Japan, including its history, politics, society, literature, religion, and arts, as well as contemporary Japan, the changing field of Japanese studies, and postmodern theories of power.
Reviews
'This is a welcome addition to every Japanese library, institutional and personal...This current volume from Brill is a scholarly and provocative complement ...[The six volumes of the Studies in the Modernization of Japan from Princeton in the 1960s and 1970s]...This is the dynamic of history as inquiry.'
H.J. Jones, Pacific Affairs, 1998.
'In short, this volume is a veritable treasure trove for anyone interested in Meiji Japan.'
Marvin Marcus, The Journal of Asian Studies, 1998.
H.J. Jones, Pacific Affairs, 1998.
'In short, this volume is a veritable treasure trove for anyone interested in Meiji Japan.'
Marvin Marcus, The Journal of Asian Studies, 1998.
€96.00$125.00
Vyjayanthi R. Selinger, Bowdoin College
Authorizing the Shogunate is a study of the symbolic construction of warrior order in the Heike monogatari corpus.
€125.00$163.00
Yoshiko Imaizumi, Meiji Shrine Research Institute
Sacred Space in the Modern City offers new and original perspectives on a number of controversial issues and important questions concerning Japanese pre- and post-war ideology and identity. The author uses Meiji shrine as a lens with which to investigate the nature of the society that created, ...
€146.00$203.00
Joshua A. Fogel York University
In Japanese Historiography and the Gold Seal of 57 C.E., Joshua Fogel examines the waves of historiographical analysis that this first item to pass officially from China to Japan has undergone in the two-plus centuries since its discovery.
€107.00$149.00
Takeshi Moriyama, Murdoch University
Crossing Boundaries in Tokugawa Society presents a vivid picure of the life of Suzuki Bokushi (1770-1842), an elite villager in a snowy province of Japan, focusing on his interaction with the changing social and cultural environment of the late Tokugawa period (1603-1868).
€112.00$156.00
Joseph T. Sorensen, University of California at Davis
In Optical Allusions: Screens, Paintings, and Poetry in Classical Japan (ca. 800-1200), Joseph T. Sorensen illustrates how painted screens and other visual art objects contributed to the development of some of the essential characteristics of Japanese court poetry.
€96.00$133.00
Fabian Schäfer, University of Zurich
Public Opinion – Propaganda – Ideology offers an account of the interwar discourse on the social function of the press in Japan.
€105.00$146.00
Anna Beerens and Mark Teeuwen
Intellectual life in Edo-period Japan was sometimes harmoniously productive, sometimes destructively vicious, but never stagnant. This volume, compiled in honour of Prof. W.J. Boot, offers eleven essays that explore the intellectual scene of Edo-period Japan from a variety of perspectives.
€93.00$128.00
Kazumi Nagaike, Oita University
By systematically analyzing the process of female fantasy formation, this book represents the first extensive critical attempt to examine Japanese women's narratives of male homosexuality, including both purely literary works (with English translations) and material derived from popular culture.
€144.00$187.00
by Ōta Gyūichi. Translated and edited by J.S.A. Elisonas and J.P. Lamers
Shinchō-Kō ki, the work translated here into English under the title “The Chronicle of Lord Nobunaga,” is the most important source on the career of one of the best known figures in all of Japanese history—Oda Nobunaga (1534-1582), the first of the “Three Heroes” who unified Japan after a ...
€157.00$203.00
Michael F. Marra
Essays on Japan is a compilation of Professor Michael F. Marra’s essays written in the past ten
years on the topics of Japanese literature, Japanese aesthetics, and the space between the two subjects.
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