The Foundations of Japan's Modernization: A Comparison With China's Path Towards Modernization

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BRILL, 1996 - 152 pages
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Tracing and evaluating the development in the history of Japanese culture and society that permits Japan's rapid and continuing modernization, Professor Yoda provides a new and original approach to the modernization of Japan. He starts from the assumption that Japan was better equipped for modernization because pre-modern Japan had already started to abandon Confucian influences. In his account of modernization during the Meiji-period he focuses on general patterns inherent in Japanese culture and society enabling Japan to integrate foreign elements without having to follow foreign models slavishly. 'Patterns in culture', such as the Japanese preference for juxtaposing the new and the ancient, are contrasted with China's preference for discarding past institutions in revolutionary processes. The transferability of paradigms such as 'absolutism' is accepted with some modifications.
In the major descriptive part of the work, the history of economic, political, institutional modernization is presented on the basis of quotations from original Japanese (and Chinese) sources, arranged within the methodological framework of universal historical concepts, indigenous cultural patterns and specific conditions in both countries.
The book is composed of two articles previously published in Japanese and Chinese, two new chapters written especially for the volume, and background information provided by Professor Radtke.
 

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Table des matières

Chapter Six In Search of a Modern State
82
Chapter Seven The Modernization of the Economy
106
Chapter Eight Japana Model Case of Modernization
126
Bibliography
139
Droits d'auteur

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Fréquemment cités

Page 98 - ... executive authority by sanctioning and promulgating laws and ordinances, by convoking and dissolving the Imperial Diet, by determining the organization of the different branches of the Administration and the salaries of civil and military officers, and by the appointment and dismissal of the same ; supreme command of the Army and Navy ; the right to declare war and conclude treaties of peace, and to confer titles of nobility and other marks of honour ; the ordering of amnesty, pardons, commutation...
Page 100 - The government now promised the promulgation of a constitution and the establishment of a parliament in ten years...

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À propos de l'auteur (1996)

Kurt W. Radtke, Ph.D. (1975) in Chinese, Australian National University, Canberra, is Professor of Modern Japanese History at Leiden University, the Netherlands. He has published extensively on Chinese and Japanese history and culture, including his "Poetry of the Yuan Dynasty," (Canberra, 1984), "China's Relations with Japan 1945-1985" (Manchester, 1990) "China's Modernization" (Stuttgart, 1993, edited with A. Saich).

Informations bibliographiques