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DB: BASE de DATOS, Biblioteca del Centro Cultural de la Embajada de Japon
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作成日:2011/06/11 03:27:21 JST最終更新日:2015/12/29 03:17:33 JST
RUBRO HISTORIA
TITULO The Edo Inheritance (★)
AUTOR Tokugawa Tsunenari (*)
EDITORIAL I-House Press
ISBN 978-4-903452-14-2
IDIOMA INGLES
CODIGO INTERNO HA-0141
NOTA (*)(Tokugawa Tsunenari, born in Tokyo in 1940, is eighteenth head of the main lineage of the Tokugawa family. After graduating from the Faculty of Political Science at Gakushuin University in 1964, he joined the NYK Line, one of the largest shipping companies in the world. Retiring as an executive vice president in 2002, he became an advisor to the company. In 2003 he established the Tokugawa Memorial Foundation and became its president. He has served as chairman of World Wildlife Federation Japan since 2007. Mr. Tokugawa spent two years in London as a student[1959-61] and a total of six years in New York as a businessman[1971-74, 1998-2000]. ) (★)(What was the Edo inheritance? The Japanese have often thought of the Edo period as Japan´s dark ages, when the nation, isolated under the Tokugawa shogunate´s national seclusion policy, fell hopelessly behind the rest of the world. In this book Tokugawa Tsunenari argues that, on the contrary, Tokugawa Japan was in many ways ahead of the West in its long peace and widespread prosperity. After the anarchy of a hundred years of civil warfare, three extraordinary historical figures ushered in the Pax Tokugawa that lasted 265 years, from 1603 to 1868. Oda Nobunaga destroyed what remained of the medieval order, Toyotomi Hideyoshi brought Japan under a single authority, and Tokugawa Ieyasu, the first shogun, constructed an enduring peace. Under Tokugawa rule control of flooding increased rice harvests, the samurai were transformed into a class of competent and highly moral administrators, and literacy spread. Japan in the eighteenth century was the most urbanized country in the world and boasted the most sophisticated culture of the time. Writing from his unique perspective as the eighteenth head of the house of Tokugawa, the author points out that a reevaluation of the Tokugawa era is long overdue. Indeed, the solid cultural values fostered during those three centuries of peace -egalitarianism, a small government leaving much to local antonomy, religious tolerance, living in harmony with nature- have much to offer the world in an age of rapid globalization and uncertainty.)

   

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