Tradition and modernization in Japanese culture,
edited by Donald H. Shively. Contributors: Carmen Blacker [and others]
- Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press 1971.
- xvii, 689 p illus 22 cm.
- Studies in the modernization of Japan 5. .
Papers from the fifth seminar of the Conference on Modern Japan, held in Puerto Rico, January, 1966.
Includes bibliographical references.
Strategies for modernizing: On the nature of Western progress: the journal of the Iwakura embassy / Westernization and Japanization: the early Meiji transformation of education / The Japanization of the mi ddle Meiji / The Sin-Japanese War of 1894-95 and its cultural effects on Japan / The arts in the Meiji period: Western style painting in the early Meiji period and its critics / The formation of realism in Meiji painting: the artistic career of Takahashi Yuichi / The modern music of Meiji Japan / The search for identity in literature: Natsume S?oseki and the psychological novel / T?oson and the autobiographical novel / Masaoka Shiki and Tanka reform / Kobayashi Hideo / Fukuda Tsuneari: modernization and Shingeki / Philosophy, religion, and language: Nishida Kitar?o: the early years / Millenarian aspects of the new religions in Japan / Levels of speech (keigo) and the Japanese linguistic response to modernization / Eugene Soviak -- Michio Nagai -- Donald H. Shively -- Donald Keene -- John M. Rosenfield -- T?oru Haga -- William P. Malm -- Howard S. Hibbett -- Edwin McClellan -- Robert H. Brower -- Edward Seidensticker -- Benito Ortolani -- Valdo Humbert Viglielmo -- Carmen Blacker -- Roy Andrew Miller. pt. 1. pt. 2. pt. 3. pt. 4.