This volume examines the careers and intellectual positions of three prominent Japanese “dissidents” in the later Imperial period – Minobe Tatsukichi, Sakai Toshihiko and Saitō Takao – as individual responses to the new forms of authority that appeared after the Meiji Restoration of 1868. The principles to which each adhered – the rule of law, socialist egalitarianism, and representative government – contributed to the new ideas about authority and the individual in post-Restoration Japan. They also remain fundamental (at least in theory) in today’s Japanese polity and society. The study reaffirms the serious limitations of the pre-war Japanese political system, its structural and institutional problems, and deep-rooted ambivalence about de...
Was the Meiji Restoration a “Revolution” in a modern world? If so, what kind of revolution was it? T...
With the abolition of the Tokugawa Shogunate on January 3, 1868, the Imperial Court was in an urgent...
The process in which a nation becomes a modern constitutional nation always accompanies many proble...
This inquiry into the thought of three political thinkers in pre-war Japan is motivated by a concer...
In this episode, Dr. Sasamoto-Collins notes tension in Japanese society following the Meiji Restorat...
This study is a treatment of the conflicts between politics and militarism in Japan from the promulg...
The success of the Meiji Restoration has been extensively researched but its limitations or shizoku ...
The thesis is concerned with three so-called "incidents of intense violence" (gekka jiken) that occu...
Abstract: Unlike building railroads, writing treaties and conducting diplomacy was by no means a new...
This study aims to identify the strengths and limits for the academic development of the Japan studi...
Under the Meiji Constitution, a political system designed to create an institutional framework that ...
In this paper, the basic condition that became the premise of the various political trends in the Me...
Under the Meiji Constitution, a political system designed to create an institutional framework that ...
Labor and Imperial Democracy in Prewar Japan examines the political role played by working men and w...
Was the Meiji Restoration a “Revolution” in a modern world? If so, what kind of revolution was it? T...
Was the Meiji Restoration a “Revolution” in a modern world? If so, what kind of revolution was it? T...
With the abolition of the Tokugawa Shogunate on January 3, 1868, the Imperial Court was in an urgent...
The process in which a nation becomes a modern constitutional nation always accompanies many proble...
This inquiry into the thought of three political thinkers in pre-war Japan is motivated by a concer...
In this episode, Dr. Sasamoto-Collins notes tension in Japanese society following the Meiji Restorat...
This study is a treatment of the conflicts between politics and militarism in Japan from the promulg...
The success of the Meiji Restoration has been extensively researched but its limitations or shizoku ...
The thesis is concerned with three so-called "incidents of intense violence" (gekka jiken) that occu...
Abstract: Unlike building railroads, writing treaties and conducting diplomacy was by no means a new...
This study aims to identify the strengths and limits for the academic development of the Japan studi...
Under the Meiji Constitution, a political system designed to create an institutional framework that ...
In this paper, the basic condition that became the premise of the various political trends in the Me...
Under the Meiji Constitution, a political system designed to create an institutional framework that ...
Labor and Imperial Democracy in Prewar Japan examines the political role played by working men and w...
Was the Meiji Restoration a “Revolution” in a modern world? If so, what kind of revolution was it? T...
Was the Meiji Restoration a “Revolution” in a modern world? If so, what kind of revolution was it? T...
With the abolition of the Tokugawa Shogunate on January 3, 1868, the Imperial Court was in an urgent...
The process in which a nation becomes a modern constitutional nation always accompanies many proble...