The aim of this paper is to critically assess the extent to which the concept of second modernity and reflexive modernization proposed by Beck and Grande is relevant to East Asia. Concepts such as driving forces, human agency, objective-structural versus cultural-discursive dimensions, radicalizing versus deficiencies aspects of modernity, push versus pull factors are used to clarify the basic conditions of this historical transformation. Utilizing these conceptual schemes, this paper has advanced the following central claims: 1) Second modernity and reflexive modernization, as a global trend, affects East Asia as deeply as it does in the West, especially when we see this as a structurally conditioned historical transformation; 2) Global ri...
This chapter explores culture, and its possibilities and limits, in the light of Asia’s great potent...
[[abstract]]This paper will deal with Japan’s relations with East Asia, especially for China, the Ko...
I look new horizon beyond colonial modernity and national modernity. I reject the "binary constructi...
This chapter examines the development of political modernity in East Asia in the early twentieth cen...
Revised paper presented at the international conference on The Course of Modernization in the Count...
This special issue examines colonial modernity in both historic and contemporary East Asia in order ...
Transformation studies should be a key topic for the comparative analysis of civilizations. Their mo...
The European brand of modernisation that was introduced to China by the force of arms in the 19th-20...
Over the period of the last two or three decades, East Asia has achieved remarkable success. It is h...
This paper examines individualization from the perspective of transnational marriage as a concrete h...
This paper traces the development of the ‘New Asianism’ in Japan over the past quarter of a century...
An analysis of how attempts by both Japan and its periphery to construct their own version of modern...
The paper focuses on the widespread presupposition about a possibility for the developing countries ...
노트 : Revised paper presented at the international conference on “The Course of Modernization in the ...
This text was prepared for presentation in Nagoya, Japan, in 2010. Its aim was to explore a dialogue...
This chapter explores culture, and its possibilities and limits, in the light of Asia’s great potent...
[[abstract]]This paper will deal with Japan’s relations with East Asia, especially for China, the Ko...
I look new horizon beyond colonial modernity and national modernity. I reject the "binary constructi...
This chapter examines the development of political modernity in East Asia in the early twentieth cen...
Revised paper presented at the international conference on The Course of Modernization in the Count...
This special issue examines colonial modernity in both historic and contemporary East Asia in order ...
Transformation studies should be a key topic for the comparative analysis of civilizations. Their mo...
The European brand of modernisation that was introduced to China by the force of arms in the 19th-20...
Over the period of the last two or three decades, East Asia has achieved remarkable success. It is h...
This paper examines individualization from the perspective of transnational marriage as a concrete h...
This paper traces the development of the ‘New Asianism’ in Japan over the past quarter of a century...
An analysis of how attempts by both Japan and its periphery to construct their own version of modern...
The paper focuses on the widespread presupposition about a possibility for the developing countries ...
노트 : Revised paper presented at the international conference on “The Course of Modernization in the ...
This text was prepared for presentation in Nagoya, Japan, in 2010. Its aim was to explore a dialogue...
This chapter explores culture, and its possibilities and limits, in the light of Asia’s great potent...
[[abstract]]This paper will deal with Japan’s relations with East Asia, especially for China, the Ko...
I look new horizon beyond colonial modernity and national modernity. I reject the "binary constructi...