Description

Book Synopsis
Japan’s Private Spheres: Autonomy in Japanese History, 1600-1930 traces the shifting nature of autonomy in early modern and modern Japan. In this far-reaching, interdisciplinary study, W. Puck Brecher explores the historical development of the private and its evolving relationship with public authority, a dynamic that evokes stereotypes about an alleged dearth of individual agency in Japanese society. It does so through a montage of case studies. For the early modern era, case studies examine peripheral living spaces, boyhood, and self-interrogation in the arts. For the modern period, they explore strategic deviance, individuality in Meiji education, modern leisure, and body-maintenance. Analysis of these disparate private realms illuminates evolving conceptualizations of the private and its reciprocal yet often-contested relationship to the state.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Figures and Tables Keywords (キーワード) Prologue PART 1 Contextualizing the Private Sphere in Japanese History 1 Introduction  The Private “Problem”br/>  1 Contexts of Privacy in Modernizing Japan  2 Challenges and Methodologies 2 Public and Private in Pre-Meiji Thought and Society  1 Introduction  2 Public and Private in the Japanese Context  3 Public and Private in the Medieval Period  4 Public and Private in the Edo Period 3 The Private Self and the Meiji-Taisho State  1 The Individual’s Relationship to the State  2 Prescribed Private Spheres: Religion, the Home, and Leisure  3 Historiography on Modern Japan’s Private Spheres PART 2 The Autonomous Self in the Edo Period (1600–1868) 4 Peripheries as Private Spheres  1 Everything in Its Place: City, Suburb, Countryside  2 Kōetsumura  3 Itami   3.1 Itami Saké   3.2 The Itami Salon  4 Negishi   4.1 Negishi as a Homegrown Living Space   4.2 Resignation and Reclusion 5 Boyhood as an Autonomous Sphere  1 Introduction  2 Practical Childrearing  3 Diaries  4 Role Models and the Moral Authority of the Private 6 “Publicizing” the Private  Self-Interrogation and Self-Indulgence in the Arts  1 Human Difference in Early Modern Thought  2 The Self-Interrogation of Hakuin (1685–1768) and Kinkoku (1761–1832)  3 Self and Self-Portraiture  4 Master Depravity and the Self as Spectacle PART 3 Public and Private Selves in Meiji and Taisho (1868–1926) 7 The Deviant in Meiji Society  Autonomy, Individuality, and Public Power  1 Meiji’s New Normal  2 Loser Literature  3 Anguished Art  4 Ideology and Rupture: Eccentricity and Its Place in Meiji’s Cultural Field 8 The Private Individual in Early Meiji Education (1872–1890s)  1 The Individual in Early Meiji Education  2 On the Practice of Keeping Individuality Charts  3 Early Student Charts in the United States  4 Individuality as Control 9 Education and Public Individuality (1890s–1927)  1 Kosei in Public Education  2 Changes in Student Evaluations  3 Kosei as “Public Individuality” PART 4 The Nationalization of Private Leisure (1868–1930s) 10 Vacationing and Moral Authority  1 School Summer Vacations  2 Moral Authority and Vacationing for Adults  3 Ambivalence and Contestation 11 Nationalizing the Body Physical Exercise as a Public Ethic  1 “Civilizing” the Physical Body  2 Western Athletics  3 Public Fitness as Statecraft (1920s~) 12 Conclusion Can Modern Japan’s Private Spheres Be Moral?  1 Reconciliations of Self and State  Epilogue  Bibliography  Index

Japan’s Private Spheres: Autonomy in Japanese

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      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 01/04/2021
      ISBN13: 9789004447547, 978-9004447547
      ISBN10: 9004447547

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Japan’s Private Spheres: Autonomy in Japanese History, 1600-1930 traces the shifting nature of autonomy in early modern and modern Japan. In this far-reaching, interdisciplinary study, W. Puck Brecher explores the historical development of the private and its evolving relationship with public authority, a dynamic that evokes stereotypes about an alleged dearth of individual agency in Japanese society. It does so through a montage of case studies. For the early modern era, case studies examine peripheral living spaces, boyhood, and self-interrogation in the arts. For the modern period, they explore strategic deviance, individuality in Meiji education, modern leisure, and body-maintenance. Analysis of these disparate private realms illuminates evolving conceptualizations of the private and its reciprocal yet often-contested relationship to the state.

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Figures and Tables Keywords (キーワード) Prologue PART 1 Contextualizing the Private Sphere in Japanese History 1 Introduction  The Private “Problem”br/>  1 Contexts of Privacy in Modernizing Japan  2 Challenges and Methodologies 2 Public and Private in Pre-Meiji Thought and Society  1 Introduction  2 Public and Private in the Japanese Context  3 Public and Private in the Medieval Period  4 Public and Private in the Edo Period 3 The Private Self and the Meiji-Taisho State  1 The Individual’s Relationship to the State  2 Prescribed Private Spheres: Religion, the Home, and Leisure  3 Historiography on Modern Japan’s Private Spheres PART 2 The Autonomous Self in the Edo Period (1600–1868) 4 Peripheries as Private Spheres  1 Everything in Its Place: City, Suburb, Countryside  2 Kōetsumura  3 Itami   3.1 Itami Saké   3.2 The Itami Salon  4 Negishi   4.1 Negishi as a Homegrown Living Space   4.2 Resignation and Reclusion 5 Boyhood as an Autonomous Sphere  1 Introduction  2 Practical Childrearing  3 Diaries  4 Role Models and the Moral Authority of the Private 6 “Publicizing” the Private  Self-Interrogation and Self-Indulgence in the Arts  1 Human Difference in Early Modern Thought  2 The Self-Interrogation of Hakuin (1685–1768) and Kinkoku (1761–1832)  3 Self and Self-Portraiture  4 Master Depravity and the Self as Spectacle PART 3 Public and Private Selves in Meiji and Taisho (1868–1926) 7 The Deviant in Meiji Society  Autonomy, Individuality, and Public Power  1 Meiji’s New Normal  2 Loser Literature  3 Anguished Art  4 Ideology and Rupture: Eccentricity and Its Place in Meiji’s Cultural Field 8 The Private Individual in Early Meiji Education (1872–1890s)  1 The Individual in Early Meiji Education  2 On the Practice of Keeping Individuality Charts  3 Early Student Charts in the United States  4 Individuality as Control 9 Education and Public Individuality (1890s–1927)  1 Kosei in Public Education  2 Changes in Student Evaluations  3 Kosei as “Public Individuality” PART 4 The Nationalization of Private Leisure (1868–1930s) 10 Vacationing and Moral Authority  1 School Summer Vacations  2 Moral Authority and Vacationing for Adults  3 Ambivalence and Contestation 11 Nationalizing the Body Physical Exercise as a Public Ethic  1 “Civilizing” the Physical Body  2 Western Athletics  3 Public Fitness as Statecraft (1920s~) 12 Conclusion Can Modern Japan’s Private Spheres Be Moral?  1 Reconciliations of Self and State  Epilogue  Bibliography  Index

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