Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Preface Explanatory Note Chronology Contributors PART FOUR The Tokugawa Peace 20. Ieyasu and the Founding of the Tokugawa Shogunate (Willem Boot) Code for the Warrior Households Code for the Imperial Court and Court Nobility Ieyasu’s Revenge and Compassion Tales from Mikawa Account of Tokugawa Letter from Honda Masazumi and Konchiin S ū den to Katagiri Katsumoto Letter from Toyotomi Hideyori to Shimazu Iehisa The Reasons for Ieyasu’s Frugality A Story Illustrating Ieyasu’s Frugality Letter from Konchiin S ū den The Story of the Miike Sword The Reign of Emperor Go-Daigo 21. Confucianism in the Early Tokugawa Period (Willem Boot) Fujiwara Seika and the Rise of Neo-Confucianism ‘‘The Four Landscapes Are Mine’’ Letter to the Korean Scholar Kang Hang Fujiwara Seika’s New/Old Learning Letter to the Head of Annam The Meeting of Minds Teachings of Zhu Xi Brought to Japan Digest of the Great Learning Hayashi Razan On Meeting with Ieyasu The Investigation of Things The Sagely Ideal Versus Practical Compromise Responses to Questions by Ieyasu ‘‘The Three Virtues’’ The Later History of the Hayashi Family School The Way of Heaven The Learning of the Mind-and-Heart and the Five Human Relationships The Way of Heaven Principles of Human Nature, in Vernacular Japanese 22. The Spread of Neo-Confucianism in Japan Yamazaki Ansai and Zhu Xi Studies (Barry Steben) Reverence and Rightness (Duty) Lecture Concerning the Chapters on the Divine Age Anecdotes Concerning Yamazaki Ansai A Question of Loyalties Yamazaki Ansai and His Three Pleasures Asami Keisai Treatise on the Concept of the Middle Kingdom Sat ō Naokata Collected Arguments on the Concept of the Middle Kingdom The Mito School (Barry Steben) Tokugawa Tsunaeda Preface to the History of Great Japan Asaka Tanpaku Appraisal [Appended] to the Chronology of Emperor Go-Daigo Kaibara Ekken: Human Nature and the Study of Nature (Mary Evelyn Tucker) Elementary Learning for Children Record of Great Doubts The Ō y ō mei (Wang Yangming) School in Japan (Barry Steben) Nakae T ō ju Control of the Mind Is True Learning Dialogue with an Old Man The Divine Light in the Mind The Supreme Lord and God of Life Kumazawa Banzan: Confucian Practice in Seventeenth-Century Japan (Ian James McMullen) The Way and Methods The Categories of Morality The Transmission of the Way to Japan in Early Antiquity Buddhism Deforestation The Relevance of Ritual to Modern Times The Economy Questions on the Great Learning Nakae T ō ju’s Successors in the Ō y ō mei School (Barry Steben) Fuchi K ō zan Innate Knowledge (Filiality) as the Essential Life Force Miwa Shissai Everyday Method of the Mind Regarding Wang Yangming’s ‘‘Four Maxims’’ 23. The Evangelic Furnace: Japan’s First Encounter with the West (J. S. A. Elisonas) European Documents A Christian Critique of Shinto A Summary of the Errors in Which the Heathen of Japan Live and of Some Heathen Sects on Which They Principally Rely Alexandro Valignano’s Japanese Mission Policy Summary of Japanese Matters A Jesuit Priest’s Observations of Women Jesus Maria Japanese Documents The Anti-Christian Edicts of Toyotomi Hideyoshi Notice Decree Letter to the Viceroy of India Statement on the Expulsion of the Bateren Fabian Fucan Pro and Contra The My ō tei Dialogue Deus Destroyed A Buddhist Refutation of Christianity Christians Demolished: Tract and Glosses 24. Confucian Revisionists (Wm. Theodore de Bary and John A. Tucker) Fundamentalism and Revisionism in the Critique of Neo-Confucianism Yamaga Sok ō and the Civilizing of the Samurai (John A. Tucker) Preface to the Elementary Learning for Samurai The Way of the Samurai Short Preface to the Essential Teachings of the Sages Essential Teachings of the Sages An Autobiography in Exile It ō Jinsai’s School of Ancient Meanings (John A. Tucker) The Meaning of Terms in the Analects and Mencius Ogy ū Sorai and the Return to the Classics The Confucian Way as a Way of Government Distortion of the Way Through Ignorance of the Past Distinguishing Terms Conclusion to Discourses on Government For a Merit System in Government Settlement on the Land Muro Ky ū s ō ’s Defense of Neo-Confucianism In Defense of Zhu Xi’s Neo-Confucianism Economics and Traditional Values The People Should Be as Heaven to the King 25. Varieties of Neo-Confucian Education Principles of Education Yamazaki Ansai Preface to the Collected Commentaries on Zhu Xi’s Regulations of the White Deer Grotto Academy Regulations of the White Deer Grotto Academy Kaibara Ekken (Mary Evelyn Tucker) Precepts for Daily Life in Japan ‘‘The Great Learning for Women’’ The Shizutani School (Mary Evelyn Tucker) Regulations of the Shizutani School The Merchant Academy of Kaitokud ō (Tetsuo Najita) Lecture on the Early Chapters of the Analects and Mencius Items of Understanding, Items of Understanding, Ogy ū Sorai’s Approach to Learning (Richard Minear) Learning Principles Hirose Tans ō ’s School System (Marleen Kassel) Roundabout Words 26. Popular Instruction Ishida Baigan’s Learning of the Mind and the Way of the Merchant (Janine Sawada) City and Country Dialogues The House Codes of Tokugawa Merchant Families The Testament of Shimai S ō shitsu The Code of the Okaya House Ihara Saikaku The Japanese Family Storehouse Mitsui Takafusa Some Observations About Merchants Muro Ky ū s ō The General Sense of the Extended Meaning of the Six Precepts Hosoi Heish ū Sermon, December 14, How to Behave at Temple Schools Precepts for the Young 27. The Vocabulary of Japanese Aesthetics III (Donald Keene) Chikamatsu Monzaemon On Realism in Art Yosaku from Tanba 28. Haiku and the Democracy of Poetry as a Popular Art (Donald Keene) Matsuo Bash ō The Rustic Gate Kyorai’s Conversations with Bash ō Issa 29. ‘‘Dutch Learning’’ (Grant Goodman) Engelbert Kaempfer Account of Visits to Edo Sugita Genpaku The Beginnings of Dutch Learning Ō tsuki Gentaku Misunderstandings About the Dutch Shiba K ō kan Discussing Western Painting 30. Eighteenth-Century Rationalism Arai Hakuseki’s Confucian Perspective on Government and Society (Kate Nakai) The Function of Rites The Evolution of Japanese History Views on the Course of History Hakuseki’s View of Christianity and the West Tidings of the West Hakuseki’s Approach to Fiscal Policy and Trade Musings by a Brushwood Fire Tominaga Nakamoto’s Historical Relativism Testament of an Old Man Discourses After Emerging from Meditation And ō Sh ō eki’s Ecological Community The Natural Way of True Self-Operation Miura Baien’s Search for a New Logic (Rosemary Mercer) ‘‘The Origin of Price’’ Deep Words Baien’s System of ‘‘Logic’’ Space and Time Heaven-and-Earth Is the Teacher J ō ri and Science Kaiho Seiry ō and the Laws of Economics The Law of the Universe: Commodities Transactions 31. The Way of the Warrior II The Debate over the Ak ō Vendetta (John A. Tucker and Barry Steben) Okado Denpachir ō Memorandum Religious Nuances of the Ak ō Case (John A. Tucker and Barry Steben) Hayashi Razan ‘‘Loyal Retainers and Righteous Warriors’’ Hayashi H ō k ō ‘‘On Revenge’’ Muro Ky ū s ō Preface to Records of the Righteous Men of Ak ō Domain Ogy ū Sorai ‘‘Essay on the Forty-seven Samurai’’ Sat ō Naokata Notes on the Forty-six Men Asami Keisai ‘‘Essay on the Forty-six Samurai’’ Dazai Shundai ‘‘Essay on the Forty-six Samurai of Ak ō Domain’’ Goi Ransh ū Refutation of Dazai Shundai’s ‘‘Essay on the Forty-six Samurai of Ak ō Domain’’ Fukuzawa Yukichi An Encouragement of Learning The Ak ō Vendetta Dramatized (Donald Keene) The Treasury of Loyal Retainers Hagakure and the Way of the Samurai (Barry Steben) In the Shadow of Leaves 32. The National Learning Schools (Peter Nosco) Kada no Azumamaro Petition for the Establishment of a School of National Learning Kamo no Mabuchi Inquiry into the Idea of Poetry Inquiry into the Idea of the Nation Motoori Norinaga Precious Comb-box ‘‘First Steps into the Mountains’’ Love and Poetry Personal Views of Poetry Poetry and mono no aware A Little Boat Breaking a Path Through the Reeds Good and Evil in The Tale of Genji The Exquisite Comb Hirata Atsutane On Japanese Learning The Land of the Gods The Creator God Ancient Japanese Ethics The Art of Medicine Ō kuni Takamasa The New True International Law 33. Buddhism in the Tokugawa Period Suzuki Sh ō san (Royall Tyler) Right Action for All Takuan S ō h ō (William Bodiford) Marvelous Power of Immovable Wisdom Bankei Opening of the Sermons Hakuin Ekaku My Old Tea Kettle Jiun Sonja (Paul Watt) Sermons on the Precepts and Monastic Life 34. Orthodoxy, Protest, and Local Reform The Prohibition of Heterodox Studies The Kansei Edict The Justification for the Kansei Edict The Later Wang Yangming ( Ō y ō mei) School (Barry Steben) Sat ō Issai Attentiveness to One’s Intentions Articulating One’s Resolve Ō shio Heihachir ō Ō shio’s Protest Innate Knowledge and the Spiritual Radiance of the Sun Goddess Notes on ‘‘Cleansing the Mind’’ Agrarian Reform and Cooperative Planning Ninomiya Sontoku The Repayment of Virtue The Practice of Repayment The Way of Nature The ‘‘Pill’’ of the Three Religions Society for Returning Virtue 35. Forerunners of the Restoration Rai Sany ō and Yamagata Daini: Loyalism Rai Sany ō ’s Unofficial History (Barry Steben) Unofficial History of Japan Yamagata Daini’s New Thesis (Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi) Master Ry ū ’s New Thesis Honda Toshiaki: Ambitions for Japan A Secret Plan of Government Sat ō Nobuhiro: Totalitarian Nationalism Preface to The Essence of Economics Questions and Answers Concerning Restoration of the Ancient Order The Population Problem Total Government Essays on Creation and Cultivation Confidential Plan of World Unification 36. The Debate over Seclusion and Restoration The Later Mito School Aizawa Seishisai: ‘‘Revere the Emperor, Repel the Barbarian’’ ‘‘New Theses’’ The Opening of Japan from Within Sakuma Sh ō zan: Eastern Ethics and Western Science Reflections on My Errors Yokoi Sh ō nan: Opening the Country for the Common Good Three Theses on State Policy Yoshida Sh ō in: Death-Defying Heroism On Leadership On Being Direct Arms and Learning Facing Death Selfishness and Heroism Fukuzawa Yukichi: Pioneer of Westernization The Autobiography of Fukuzawa Yukichi Reform Proposals of Sakamoto Ry ō ma, Saig ō Takamori, and Ō kubo Toshimichi Sakamoto Ry ō ma: Eight-Point Proposal Letter from Saig ō Takamori and Ō kubo Toshimichi on the Imperial Restoration PART FIVE Japan, Asia, and the West 37. The Meiji Restoration (Fred G. Notehelfer) Edict to Subjugate the Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu Letter of Resignation of the Last Shogun Edict to Foreign Diplomats The Charter Oath The Constitution of The Abolition of Feudalism and the Centralization of the Meiji State Memorial on the Proposal to Return the Registers Imperial Rescript on the Abolition of the han The Leaders and Their Vision The Iwakura Mission Kido Takayoshi’s Observations of Education in the United States Kido on the Need for Constitutional Government Kume Kunitake’s Assessment of European Wealth and Power Kido’s Observations on Returning from the West Consequences of the Iwakura Mission: Saig ō and Ō kubo on Korea Letters from Saig ō Takamori to Itagaki Taisuke on the Korean Question Ō kubo Toshimichi’s Reasons for Opposing the Korean Expedition The Meiji Emperor Letter from the Meiji Emperor to His People Comments from the Imperial Progress of A Glimpse of the Meiji Emperor in 1872 by Takashima Tomonosuke Charles Lanman’s Description of the Meiji Emperor in The Meiji Emperor’s Conversation with Hijikata Hisamoto on the Outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War A Poem by the Meiji Emperor on the Eve of the Russo-Japanese War 38. Civilization and Enlightenment (Albert Craig) Fukuzawa Yukichi Fukuzawa Yukichi’s View of Civilization An Outline of a Theory of Civilization An Encouragement of Learning Enlightenment Thinkers of the Meirokusha: On Marriage Mori Arinori On Wives and Concubines Kat ō Hiroyuki Abuses of Equal Rights for Men and Women Fukuzawa Yukichi The Equal Numbers of Men and Women Sakatani Shiroshi On Concubines Tsuda Mamichi Distinguishing the Equal Rights of Husbands and Wives Nakamura Masanao: China Should Not Be Despised Japan’s Debt to China 39. Popular Rights and Constitutionalism (James Huffman) Debating a National Assembly, 1873–1875 Itagaki Taisuke Memorial on the Establishment of a Representative Assembly Nakamura Masanao On Changing the Character of the People Representative Assemblies and National Progress, February 1879 Editorial from Ch ō ya shinbun Defining the Constitutional State, 1876–1883 It ō Hirobumi Memorial on Constitutional Government Ō kuma Shigenobu Memorial on a National Assembly Chiba Takasabur ō ‘‘The Way of the King’’ Nakae Ch ō min A Discourse by Three Drunkards on Government The Emergence of Political Parties Itagaki Taisuke ‘‘On Liberty’’ Fukuchi Gen’ichir ō Teiseit ō Platform Ō kuma Shigenobu To Members of the Kaishint ō Ozaki Yukio Factions and Parties Bestowing the Constitution on the People, 1884–1889 It ō Hirobumi Reminiscences of the Drafting of the New Constitution Controlling the Freedom and People’s Rights Movement Fukuda Hideko My Life Thus Far Newspaper Accounts of Arrests Under the Peace Preservation Law The Meiji Constitution The Constitution of the Empire of Japan Ubukata Toshir ō ‘‘The Promulgation of the Constitution’’ 40. Education in Meiji Japan (Richard Rubinger) Views in the Early Meiji Period Iwakura Tomomi and Aristocratic Education ‘‘Admonitions to Court Nobles’’ ‘‘Further Admonitions’’ Kido Takayoshi and It ō Hirobumi on Universal Education Kido Takayoshi: Draft Memorial for the Immediate Promotion of Universal Education It ō Hirobumi: ‘‘Principles of National Policy’’ Fukuzawa Yukichi and Education An Encouragement of Learning The First Meiji School System Preamble to the Fundamental Code of Education The Confucian Critique Motoda Eifu and Emperor-Centered Education Great Principles of Education Tani Tateki’s Critique of the West Opinion on Reform of Army Pension Law Nakamura Masanao’s Synthesis of East and West ‘‘Past–Present, East–West: One Morality’’ Mori Arinori and the Later Meiji School System ‘‘Essentials of Educational Administration’’ Military-Style Physical Training Inoue Kowashi and Patriotic Training Public Education and the National Substance ‘‘Plan to Defend the National Interest’’ The Imperial Rescript on Education The Opening The Extended Meaning of the Rescript Teachers and Reform from Below ‘‘Reducing Interference in Textbook Selection’’ State Control over Textbooks Kikuchi Dairoku and the Textbook Scandal of 1903 Japanese Education The Education of Women in the Meiji Period Progress of Female Education in Meiji 41. Nationalism and Pan-Asianism State Shinto (Helen Hardacre) The Unity of Rites and Rule The Idea of Shinto as a National Teaching Memorial The Divinity of the Emperor From Article 3 of the Meiji Constitution Kat ō Genchi: ‘‘Mikadoism’’ The Patriotic Meaning of Shrines ‘‘A Policy for the Unification of the National Faith’’ State Shinto in the Colonies of Imperial Japan On the Refusal to Worship at Shrines The Emperor’s Renunciation of His Divinity Tokutomi Soh ō : A Japanese Nationalist’s View of the West and Asia (Fred G. Notehelfer) The Early Meiji Vision On Wealth and Power Youth and Revolution On Economic Versus Military Power Advocate of Freedom and People’s Rights Nationalism Supporting the Imperial State and Military Expansion Rejoicing over Victory in the Sino-Japanese War Resentment Resulting from the Triple Intervention Support for the Imperial State, Criticism of Taish ō Society Worship of the Imperial House Rejecting the West and Withdrawing from the League of Nations Justification for the China War American–Japanese Relations in Comments on the Imperial Rescript for War with Great Britain and the United States Analyzing Defeat Final Assessment Okakura Kakuz ō : Aesthetic Pan-Asianism (Aida Yuan Wong) The Ideals of the East Tea, the Cup of Humanity Yanagi Muneyoshi and the Kwanghwa Gate in Seoul, Korea(Y ŏ ngho Ch’ ŏ e) For a Korean Architecture About to Be Lost 42. The High Tide of Prewar Liberalism (Arthur E. Tiedemann) Democracy at Home Minobe Tatsukichi: The Legal Foundation for Liberal Government Lectures on the Constitution Yoshino Sakuz ō : Democracy as minpon shugi ‘‘On the Meaning of Constitutional Government and the Methods by Which It Can Be Perfected’’ Kawai Eijir ō : A Rebuke to the Military Critique of the February 26 Incident Ishibashi Tanzan: A Liberal Business Journalist ‘‘The Fantasy of Greater Japanism’’ ‘‘Before Demanding the Abolition of Racial Discrimination’’ ‘‘The Only Method for Proper Guidance of Thought Is to Allow Absolute Freedom of Speech’’ Kiyosawa Kiyoshi: Why Liberalism? Present-Day Japan Why Liberalism? Ienaga Sabur ō : The Formation of a Liberal A Historian’s Progress, Step by Step Peaceful Cooperation Abroad Shidehara Kij ū r ō : Conciliatory Diplomacy A Rapprochement with China Yamamuro S ō bun: Call for a Peaceful Japan Speech 43. Socialism and the Left (Andrew Barshay) The Early Socialist Movement Katayama Sen A Summons to the Workers Anarchism K ō toku Sh ū sui ‘‘The Change in My Thought’’ (on Universal Suffrage) Kagawa Toyohiko Before the Dawn Socialism and the Left Ō sugi Sakae Autobiography Kaneko Fumiko ‘‘What Made Me Do What I Did?’’ Marxism The Debate About Japanese Capitalism Kawakami Hajime A Letter from Prison Concerning Marxism Yamada Moritar ō Analysis of Japanese Capitalism Uno K ō z ō The Essence of Capital Marxist Cultural Criticism Tosaka Jun The Japanese Ideology Nakano Shigeharu ‘‘Farewell Before Daybreak’’ ‘‘Imperial Hotel’’ ‘‘The Rate of Exchange’’ The Tenk ō Phenomenon Letter to Our Fellow Defendants 44. The Rise of Revolutionary Nationalism (Marius Jansen) Japan and Asia An Anniversary Statement by the Amur Society Agitation by Assassination Asahi Heigo Call for a New ‘‘Restoration’’ The Plight of the Countryside Gond ō Seiky ō The Gap Between the Privileged Classes and the Commoners Kita Ikki and the Reform Wing of Ultranationalism An Outline Plan for the Reorganization of Japan The Conservative Reaffirmation Fundamentals of Our National Polity Watsuji Tetsur ō The Way of the Japanese Subject 45. Empire and War (Peter Duus) The Impact of World War I: A Conflict Between Defenders and Opponents of the Status Quo Konoe Fumimaro “Against a Pacifism Centered on England and America” A Plan to Occupy Manchuria Ishihara Kanji Personal Opinion on the Manchuria–Mongolia Problem The Economic Need for Expansion Hashimoto Kingor ō Addresses to Young Men Konoe Fumimaro Radio Address National Mobilization Army Ministry On the Basic Meaning of National Defense and Its Intensification Konoe Fumimaro Concerning the New National Structure The Imperial Rule Assistance Association Confronting the Crisis Spiritual Mobilization Ministry of Education The Way of Subjects Economic Mobilization Ry ū Shintar ō Japan’s Economic Reorganization The Greater East Asia War Arita Hachir ō The Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere The Decision for War with the United States Statement by Prime Minister T ō j ō Hideki Statement by Foreign Minister T ō g ō Shigenori on Japanese–American Negotiations Statement by Privy Council President Hara Yoshimichi Concluding Remarks by Prime Minister T ō j ō Hideki The War’s Goals Draft of Basic Plan for Establishment of Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere The Greater East Asia Conference Inaugural Address to the Greater East Asia Conference Defeat Imperial Rescript on Surrender PART SIX Postwar Japan 46. The Occupation Years, 1945–1952 (Marlene Mayo) Potsdam Declaration Initial Official Policies, American and Japanese Initial U.S. Policy for Postsurrender Japan: Required Reforms General MacArthur’s Statement to the Japanese Government Revised Report to the Diet and People by the Shidehara Cabinet A New Basic Document: The 1947 Constitution The New Constitution Introducing a New Civil Code The Revised Civil Code The Revised Family Registration Law The New Educational System The School Education Act The Fundamental Law of Education Labor Unions The Labor Standards Law Rural Land Reform Rural Land Reform Directive Views of Yoshida Shigeru Economic Stabilization and Reconstruction Postwar Reconstruction of the Japanese Economy Japan’s First White Paper on the Economy Revised U.S. Policy for Occupied Japan Reconstructing Japan as a Nation of Peace and Culture Morito Tatsuo ‘‘The Construction of a Peaceful Nation’’ Yokota Kisabur ō On Peace Regaining Sovereignty in a Bipolar World Negotiating a Formal Peace Settlement Treaty of Peace Between the Allied Powers and Japan Bilateral Security Treaty Between the United States of America and Japan Some Japanese Views of the War Kurihara Sadako A Dissident Poet’s Critique of War Ō e Kenzabur ō Growing Up During the Occupation Tanaka K ō tar ō In Search of Truth and Peace 47. Democracy and High Growth (Andrew Gordon) The Movement Against the Separate Treaty and the U.S.–Japan Military Alliance Declaration of the Peace Problems Discussion Group on Questions Surrounding an Agreement on Peace Nakasone Yasuhiro: A Critical View of the Postwar Constitution The ‘‘MacArthur’’ Constitution The Government’s View of the Economy in 1956: ‘‘The ‘postwar’ is over’’ Declaration of the Director of the Economic Planning Agency on the Occasion of the Publication of the White Paper on the Economy The Transformation of the Postwar Monarchy The Emperor System of the Masses Two Views of the Security Treaty Crisis of 1960 Maruyama Masao ‘‘8/15 and 5/19’’ Yoshimoto Takaaki ‘‘The End of a Fictitious System’’ The Consumer Revolution in Postwar Japan, 1960 The Economic Planning Agency’s White Paper on the People’s Livelihood The Economic Planning Agency’s New Long-Range Economic Plan of Japan, 1961–1970 The Income-Doubling Plan Environmental Activism in Postwar Japan: Minamata Disease We Citizens: Sit-in Strike Declaration Bulldozing the Archipelago: The Politics of Economic Growth Epilogue of Building a New Japan The Philosophy of Japanese Labor Management in the High-Growth Era Twenty Years of Labor Management The Japanese Middle Class at the End of the Twentieth Century ‘‘Farewell, Mainstream Consciousness!’’ PART SEVEN Aspects of the Modern Experience 48. The New Religions (Helen Hardacre) Kurozumiky ō Sacred Texts Tenriky ō The Tip of the Writing Brush Songs for the Service The Divine Directions Ō moto Deguchi Nao Divine Revelations Deguchi Onisabur ō Stories from the Spiritual World Divine Signposts The Path of Ō moto Reiy ū kai ky ō dan Kubo Kakutar ō : Sermon The Blue Sutra Kotani Kimi: The Mission of Reiy ū kai S ō ka gakkai Makiguchi Tsunesabur ō What Is Religious Value? The Relations Among Religion and Science, Morality, and Education Toda J ō sei ‘‘On the Nature of Life’’ Ikeda Daisaku Health and Welfare 49. Japan and the World in Cultural Debate Uchimura Kanz ō How I Became a Christian The Disrespect Incident ‘‘Two J’s’’ Natsume S ō seki ‘‘My Individualism’’ Nishida Kitar ō The Problem of Japanese Culture End ō Sh ū saku (Van Gessel) ‘‘My Coming into Faith’’ Mishima Yukio (Donald Keene) ‘‘The National Characteristics of Japanese Culture’’ Ō e Kenzabur ō ‘‘Japan, the Ambiguous, and Myself’’ 50. Gender Politics and Feminism (Brett de Bary) Gender and Modernization Magazines for Women’s Education Shimizu Toyoko: ‘‘The Broken Ring’’ Women and Labor Yamakawa Kikue: Record of the Generations of Women Hiratsuka Raich ō and the Bluestocking Society ‘‘In the Beginning Woman Was the Sun’’ ‘‘New Woman’’ Postwar Japanese Feminism Aoki Yayoi and Ecofeminism Imperialist Sentiments and the Privilege of Aggression Matsui Yayori and Asian Migrant Women in Japan The Victimization of Asian Migrant Women in Japan Ueno Chizuko and the Cultural Context of Japanese Feminism Are the Japanese Feminine? Some Problems of Japanese Feminism in Its Cultural Context Sait ō Chiyo and Japanese Feminism What Is Japanese Feminism? 51. Thinking with the Past: History Writing in Modern Japan (Carol Gluck) New Histories in Meiji Japan Taguchi Ukichi A Short History of Japanese Civilization Shigeno Yasutsugu ‘‘Those Who Engage in the Study of History Must Be Impartial and Fair-Minded in Spirit’’ Kume Kunitake ‘‘The Abuses of Textual Criticism in Historical Study’’ Marxist History Writing Lectures on the History of the Development of Japanese Capitalism The Association of Historical Studies Founding Statement Draft of the Charter of the Association of Historical Studies Writing About the Meiji Restoration Tokutomi Soh ō Future Japan Noro Eitar ō History of the Development of Japanese Capitalism Nakamura Masanori ‘‘The Meaning of the Meiji Restoration Today’’ Banno Junji ‘‘Meiji Japan’s Nation-Building Process’’ Bit ō Masahide What Is the Edo Period? Shiba Ry ō tar ō The Mountain Pass A High-School History Textbook Modern Japanese History Alternative Histories Ifa Fuy ū Old Ry ū ky ū Yanagita Kunio On Folklore Studies Takamure Itsue History of Women Japanese History in Comparison Maruyama Masao ‘‘The Structure of Matsurigoto: The Basso Ostinato of Japanese Political Life’’ Irokawa Daikichi The Culture of the Meiji Period Yasumaru Yoshio ‘‘National Religion, the Imperial Institution, and Invented Tradition: The Western Stimulus’’ The Asia-Pacific War in History and Memory Maruyama Masao ‘‘The Logic and Psychology of Ultranationalism’’ Ienaga Sabur ō The Pacific War The Ienaga Textbook Trials Ō e Kenzabur ō Hiroshima Notes Fujiwara Akira How to View the Nanjing Incident Kobayashi Yoshinori On War Ishizaka Kei A Just War Twentieth-Century Design Stamps Rethinking the Nation Amino Yoshihiko ‘‘Deconstructing ‘Japan’’’ Kano Masanao Is ‘‘Tori-shima’’ Included? Arano Yasunori and Colleagues The History of Japan in Asia Bibliography Index
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion