Women and Networks in Nineteenth-Century Japan

Women and Networks in Nineteenth-Century Japan
Title Women and Networks in Nineteenth-Century Japan PDF eBook
Author Bettina Gramlich-Oka
Publisher University of Michigan Press
Pages 301
Release 2020-11-19
Genre History
ISBN 0472127330

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Although scholars have emphasized the importance of women’s networks for civil society in twentieth-century Japan, Women and Networks in Nineteenth-Century Japan is the first book to tackle the subject for the contentious and consequential nineteenth century. The essays traverse the divide when Japan started transforming itself from a decentralized to a centralized government, from legally imposed restrictions on movement to the breakdown of travel barriers, and from ad hoc schooling to compulsory elementary school education. As these essays suggest, such changes had a profound impact on women and their roles in networks. Rather than pursue a common methodology, the authors take diverse approaches to this topic that open up fruitful avenues for further exploration. Most of the essays in this volume are by Japanese scholars; their inclusion here provides either an introduction to their work or the opportunity to explore their scholarship further. Because women are often invisible in historical documentation, the authors use a range of sources (such as diaries, letters, and legal documents) to reconstruct the familial, neighborhood, religious, political, work, and travel networks that women maintained, constructed, or found themselves in, sometimes against their will. In so doing, most but not all of the authors try to decenter historical narratives built on men’s activities and men’s occupational and status-based networks, and instead recover women’s activities in more localized groupings and personal associations.

Women and Public Life in Early Meiji Japan

Women and Public Life in Early Meiji Japan
Title Women and Public Life in Early Meiji Japan PDF eBook
Author Mara Patessio
Publisher U of M Center For Japanese Studies
Pages 241
Release 2011-01-07
Genre Social Science
ISBN 192928067X

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Women and Public Life in Early Meiji Japan focuses on women’s activities in the new public spaces of Meiji Japan. With chapters on public, private, and missionary schools for girls, their students, and teachers, on social and political groups women created, on female employment, and on women’s participation in print media, this book offers a new perspective on nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Japanese history. Women’s founding of and participation in conflicting discourses over the value of women in Meiji public life demonstrate that during this period active and vocal women were everywhere, that they did not meekly submit to the dictates of the government and intellectuals over what women could or should do, and that they were fully integrated in the production of Meiji culture. Mara Patessio shows that the study of women is fundamental not only in order to understand fully the transformations of the Meiji period, but also to understand how later generations of women could successfully move the battle forward. Women and Public Life in Early Meiji Japan is essential reading for all students and teachers of 19th- and early 20th-century Japanese history and is of interest to scholars of women’s history more generally.

Intersectionality, Transnationalism, and the History of Education

Intersectionality, Transnationalism, and the History of Education
Title Intersectionality, Transnationalism, and the History of Education PDF eBook
Author Deirdre Raftery
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 313
Release
Genre
ISBN 3031706307

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The New Cambridge History of Japan: Volume 3, The Modern Japanese Nation and Empire, c.1868 to the Twenty-First Century

The New Cambridge History of Japan: Volume 3, The Modern Japanese Nation and Empire, c.1868 to the Twenty-First Century
Title The New Cambridge History of Japan: Volume 3, The Modern Japanese Nation and Empire, c.1868 to the Twenty-First Century PDF eBook
Author Laura Hein
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 945
Release 2023-05-31
Genre History
ISBN 1108169198

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This major new volume presents innovative recent scholarship on Japan's modern history, including its imperial past and transregional entanglements. An international team of leading scholars offer accessible and thought-provoking essays that present an expansive global vision of the archipelago's history from c. 1868 to the twenty-first century. Japan was the first non-Western society to become a modern nation and empire, to industrialize, and to deliver a high standard of living to virtually all its citizens, capturing international attention ever since. These Japanese efforts to reshape global hierarchies powered a variety of debates and conflicts, both at home and with people and places beyond Japan's shores. Drawing on the latest Japanese and English-language scholarship, this volume highlights Japan's distinctive and fast-changing history.

In Close Association

In Close Association
Title In Close Association PDF eBook
Author Marnie S. Anderson
Publisher BRILL
Pages 208
Release 2023-12-04
Genre History
ISBN 1684176654

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In Close Association is the first English-language study of the local networks of women and men who built modern Japan in the Meiji period (1868–1912). Marnie Anderson uncovers in vivid detail how a colorful group of Okayama-based activists founded institutions, engaged in the Freedom and People’s Rights Movement, promoted social reform, and advocated “civilization and enlightenment” while forging pathbreaking conceptions of self and society. Alongside them were Western Protestant missionaries, making this story at once a local history and a transnational one. Placing gender analysis at its core, the book offers fresh perspectives on what women did beyond domestic boundaries, while showing men’s lives, too, were embedded in home and kin. Writing “history on the diagonal,” Anderson documents the gradual differentiation of public activity by gender in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Meiji-era associations became increasingly sex-specific, though networks remained heterosocial until the twentieth century. Anderson attends to how the archival record shapes what historians can know about individual lives. She argues for the interdependence of women and men and the importance of highlighting connections between people to explain historical change. Above all, the study sheds new light on how local personalities together transformed Japan.

Unbeaten Tracks in Japan

Unbeaten Tracks in Japan
Title Unbeaten Tracks in Japan PDF eBook
Author Isabella Lucy Bird
Publisher
Pages 404
Release 1888
Genre Japan
ISBN

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The Female as Subject

The Female as Subject
Title The Female as Subject PDF eBook
Author P.F. Kornicki
Publisher University of Michigan Press
Pages 291
Release 2010-01-08
Genre History
ISBN 1929280653

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Reveals the rich and lively world of literate women in Japan from 1600 through the early 20th century