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DB: BASE de DATOS, Biblioteca del Centro Cultural de la Embajada de Japon
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Created: 2010/08/29 00:37:54 JSTLastUpdate:2017/03/26 01:41:50 JST
RUBRO HISTORIA
TITULO The Revolutionary Origins of Modern Japan (š)
AUTOR Thomas M. Huber
EDITORIAL Stanford University Press
ISBN 0-8047-1048-1
IDIOMA INGLES
CODIGO INTERNO HA-0045
NOTA (š)(Challenging the popular view of the Meiji Restoration as aLrevolution from aboveL, this book argues that its main cause was neither the growing threat of the West nor traditional loyalty to Emperor and nation, but rather lay in class conflict and long-term institutional change. The author sees the Restoration as a revolution against feudal privilege carried out from below by a service intelligentsia of minor administrators, priests, scholars, and village officials. The book focuses on the politically most effective body of activists, those in the domain of Chooshuu, and on their most important leaders of the 1850Ls and 1860Ls : Yoshida Shooin, Kusaka Genzui, and Takasugi Shinsaku. It examines their social and educational background, explores their motives for acting, and follows them through their intellectual and political struggles. The final chapter explains various heretofore puzzling aspects of the Meiji period [1868-1912] in terms of its revolutionary origins, and concludes by showing that the Restoration, far from being uniquely Japanese, had many of the characteristics we associate with the great revolutions of England, France, and Russia. Thomas M. Huber is Assistant Professor of History at Duke University.)

   

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