A history of Japanese political thought, 1600-1901 / Watanabe Hiroshi ; translated by David Noble
Material type:
- 9784924971325 (hbk.)
- 4924971324 (hbk.)
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MAIN LIBRARY Main Library General Collection | MAIN LIBRARY Main Library General Collection | JA84 . J3W36613 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | G001963/13 2-2 | 1000330433 | ||
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MAIN LIBRARY Main Library General Collection | MAIN LIBRARY Main Library General Collection | JA84 . J3W36613 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | G.001963/13 1-2 | 1000330432 |
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JA84 . I45J453 2008 Politik global dalam teori & praktik / | JA84 . I45P45 1988 Pemikiran politik Indonesia 1945-1965 / | JA84 . J3W36613 2012 A history of Japanese political thought, 1600-1901 / | JA84 . J3W36613 2012 A history of Japanese political thought, 1600-1901 / | JA84 . O66 1985 Tokugawa ideology : early constructs, 1570-1680 | JA84 . P46 Pembangunan politik dan perubahan politik / | JA84 . P46 Pembangunan politik dan perubahan politik / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 493-527) and index.
In 1853 a flotilla of U.S. Navy warships led by Commodore Matthew C. Perry arrived in Japan. A scant fourteen years later the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate, which had lasted two and a half centuries, was at an end. What lay behind the sudden collapse of samurai rule? Watanabe Hiroshi traces the quiet changes in political thought that culminated in the dramatic events of the Meiji Revolution in 1868. Confucian ideals such as a universal Way and benevolent government under a virtuous ruler possessing the mandate of heaven were taught by successive Japanese Confucians and came to permeate the country, posing an implicit threat to military rule. Over time the development of a national consciousness, the rising prestige of the imperial court in Kyoto, and increased knowledge of the Western world created the conditions for a national debate over opening up to the Westand for radical political change.