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Constructing Subjectivities discusses some of the major autobiographies that appeared in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Japan. Tomonari connects their emergence to the social transformation taking place at the time: the modernization and industrialization of Japan. Focusing on particular groups such as wealthy peasants, newly emerging businessmen, social activists, and feminist intellectuals, Tomonari positions the autobiographies as part of the social reform their authors were trying to carry out.
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Constructing Subjectivities discusses some of the major autobiographies that appeared in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Japan. Tomonari connects their emergence to the social transformation taking place at the time: the modernization and industrialization of Japan. Focusing on particular groups such as wealthy peasants, newly emerging businessmen, social activists, and feminist intellectuals, Tomonari positions the autobiographies as part of the social reform their authors were trying to carry out.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Lexington Books
- Seitenzahl: 236
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 540g
- ISBN-13: 9780739117163
- ISBN-10: 0739117165
- Artikelnr.: 23427600
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Lexington Books
- Seitenzahl: 236
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 540g
- ISBN-13: 9780739117163
- ISBN-10: 0739117165
- Artikelnr.: 23427600
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Noboru Tomonari is assistant professor in the department of Asian languages and literatures at Carleton College, Minnesota.
Part 1 Introduction Part 2 Part I: Autobiographical Reflections in the Late
Tokugawa Period: Lives in Commerce Chapter 3 Suzuki Bokushi: The Shared
Virtue Chapter 4 Virtue as an Ideology Chapter 5 Moral Responsibility
Chapter 6 Memory as Resource Chapter 7 Trading on One's Own Chapter 8 The
Joys of an Entrepreneur Chapter 9 Initial Disappointment: Virtue Discounted
Chapter 10 Outside Yet Inside Chapter 11 The Consolation of Memory Chapter
12 Autobiographies in Between Part 13 Part II: Creating Modern Managers:
The Uses of Memory by Fukuzawa Yukichi and Shibusawa Eiichi Chapter 14
Management Intellectuals, Economy, and Autobiography Chapter 15 Sharing
Memory Chapter 16 Better than the Bureaucrats Chapter 17 The New Business
Elite Chapter 18 Overcoming Seisho (Government Protégés) Chapter 19 A
Choice of One's Own Chapter 20 Getting Ahead in the Meiji Period: Later
Autobiographies by Shibusawa Chapter 21 The Entrepreneurial Self Chapter 22
Improving Commercial Education Chapter 23 Creating and Nurturing Managers
Chapter 24 Worker Contentions Chapter 25 Social Marginality and the Meiji
Entrepreneur Autobiographies Part 26 Self-Narration as Propaganda:
Autobiographies by Anarchists and Socialists in the 1920s Chapter 27
Leaning toward the Left Chapter 28 The Conversion of a Rebel Chapter 29
Self-Transformation through Activism Chapter 30 Memory Evoked by Memory
Chapter 31 The Final Days of the Capitalist Class Chapter 32 Depicting the
Upper Middle Class Chapter 33 Changes in the Socialist Movement Chapter 34
Katayama Sen's Path to Socialism Chapter 35 Katayam as the
Peasant/Proletariat Chapter 36 The Emergence of the Proletariat Chapter 37
Autobiographies of Counterhegemony Part 38 Part IV: Working Mothers:
Autobiographies by Japanese Women in the 1950s Chapter 39 Being a Wife and
a Mother Chapter 40 Departing from a Mother's Way Chapter 41 Yamakawa Kikue
as Wife and Mother Chapter 42 Ishigaki Ayako's Search for Memory Chapter 43
Positioning Women as Mothers Chapter 44 Balancing Work and Child Care
Chapter 45 An Accidental Career Woman Chapter 46 Self-Development through
Work Chapter 47 An Activist with a Child Chapter 48 Career over Housework?
Chapter 49 Part-Time Women and the Gendered Division of Labor Chapter 50
Working Mothers and Autobiography Part 51 Conclusion Part 52 Works Cited
Tokugawa Period: Lives in Commerce Chapter 3 Suzuki Bokushi: The Shared
Virtue Chapter 4 Virtue as an Ideology Chapter 5 Moral Responsibility
Chapter 6 Memory as Resource Chapter 7 Trading on One's Own Chapter 8 The
Joys of an Entrepreneur Chapter 9 Initial Disappointment: Virtue Discounted
Chapter 10 Outside Yet Inside Chapter 11 The Consolation of Memory Chapter
12 Autobiographies in Between Part 13 Part II: Creating Modern Managers:
The Uses of Memory by Fukuzawa Yukichi and Shibusawa Eiichi Chapter 14
Management Intellectuals, Economy, and Autobiography Chapter 15 Sharing
Memory Chapter 16 Better than the Bureaucrats Chapter 17 The New Business
Elite Chapter 18 Overcoming Seisho (Government Protégés) Chapter 19 A
Choice of One's Own Chapter 20 Getting Ahead in the Meiji Period: Later
Autobiographies by Shibusawa Chapter 21 The Entrepreneurial Self Chapter 22
Improving Commercial Education Chapter 23 Creating and Nurturing Managers
Chapter 24 Worker Contentions Chapter 25 Social Marginality and the Meiji
Entrepreneur Autobiographies Part 26 Self-Narration as Propaganda:
Autobiographies by Anarchists and Socialists in the 1920s Chapter 27
Leaning toward the Left Chapter 28 The Conversion of a Rebel Chapter 29
Self-Transformation through Activism Chapter 30 Memory Evoked by Memory
Chapter 31 The Final Days of the Capitalist Class Chapter 32 Depicting the
Upper Middle Class Chapter 33 Changes in the Socialist Movement Chapter 34
Katayama Sen's Path to Socialism Chapter 35 Katayam as the
Peasant/Proletariat Chapter 36 The Emergence of the Proletariat Chapter 37
Autobiographies of Counterhegemony Part 38 Part IV: Working Mothers:
Autobiographies by Japanese Women in the 1950s Chapter 39 Being a Wife and
a Mother Chapter 40 Departing from a Mother's Way Chapter 41 Yamakawa Kikue
as Wife and Mother Chapter 42 Ishigaki Ayako's Search for Memory Chapter 43
Positioning Women as Mothers Chapter 44 Balancing Work and Child Care
Chapter 45 An Accidental Career Woman Chapter 46 Self-Development through
Work Chapter 47 An Activist with a Child Chapter 48 Career over Housework?
Chapter 49 Part-Time Women and the Gendered Division of Labor Chapter 50
Working Mothers and Autobiography Part 51 Conclusion Part 52 Works Cited
Part 1 Introduction Part 2 Part I: Autobiographical Reflections in the Late
Tokugawa Period: Lives in Commerce Chapter 3 Suzuki Bokushi: The Shared
Virtue Chapter 4 Virtue as an Ideology Chapter 5 Moral Responsibility
Chapter 6 Memory as Resource Chapter 7 Trading on One's Own Chapter 8 The
Joys of an Entrepreneur Chapter 9 Initial Disappointment: Virtue Discounted
Chapter 10 Outside Yet Inside Chapter 11 The Consolation of Memory Chapter
12 Autobiographies in Between Part 13 Part II: Creating Modern Managers:
The Uses of Memory by Fukuzawa Yukichi and Shibusawa Eiichi Chapter 14
Management Intellectuals, Economy, and Autobiography Chapter 15 Sharing
Memory Chapter 16 Better than the Bureaucrats Chapter 17 The New Business
Elite Chapter 18 Overcoming Seisho (Government Protégés) Chapter 19 A
Choice of One's Own Chapter 20 Getting Ahead in the Meiji Period: Later
Autobiographies by Shibusawa Chapter 21 The Entrepreneurial Self Chapter 22
Improving Commercial Education Chapter 23 Creating and Nurturing Managers
Chapter 24 Worker Contentions Chapter 25 Social Marginality and the Meiji
Entrepreneur Autobiographies Part 26 Self-Narration as Propaganda:
Autobiographies by Anarchists and Socialists in the 1920s Chapter 27
Leaning toward the Left Chapter 28 The Conversion of a Rebel Chapter 29
Self-Transformation through Activism Chapter 30 Memory Evoked by Memory
Chapter 31 The Final Days of the Capitalist Class Chapter 32 Depicting the
Upper Middle Class Chapter 33 Changes in the Socialist Movement Chapter 34
Katayama Sen's Path to Socialism Chapter 35 Katayam as the
Peasant/Proletariat Chapter 36 The Emergence of the Proletariat Chapter 37
Autobiographies of Counterhegemony Part 38 Part IV: Working Mothers:
Autobiographies by Japanese Women in the 1950s Chapter 39 Being a Wife and
a Mother Chapter 40 Departing from a Mother's Way Chapter 41 Yamakawa Kikue
as Wife and Mother Chapter 42 Ishigaki Ayako's Search for Memory Chapter 43
Positioning Women as Mothers Chapter 44 Balancing Work and Child Care
Chapter 45 An Accidental Career Woman Chapter 46 Self-Development through
Work Chapter 47 An Activist with a Child Chapter 48 Career over Housework?
Chapter 49 Part-Time Women and the Gendered Division of Labor Chapter 50
Working Mothers and Autobiography Part 51 Conclusion Part 52 Works Cited
Tokugawa Period: Lives in Commerce Chapter 3 Suzuki Bokushi: The Shared
Virtue Chapter 4 Virtue as an Ideology Chapter 5 Moral Responsibility
Chapter 6 Memory as Resource Chapter 7 Trading on One's Own Chapter 8 The
Joys of an Entrepreneur Chapter 9 Initial Disappointment: Virtue Discounted
Chapter 10 Outside Yet Inside Chapter 11 The Consolation of Memory Chapter
12 Autobiographies in Between Part 13 Part II: Creating Modern Managers:
The Uses of Memory by Fukuzawa Yukichi and Shibusawa Eiichi Chapter 14
Management Intellectuals, Economy, and Autobiography Chapter 15 Sharing
Memory Chapter 16 Better than the Bureaucrats Chapter 17 The New Business
Elite Chapter 18 Overcoming Seisho (Government Protégés) Chapter 19 A
Choice of One's Own Chapter 20 Getting Ahead in the Meiji Period: Later
Autobiographies by Shibusawa Chapter 21 The Entrepreneurial Self Chapter 22
Improving Commercial Education Chapter 23 Creating and Nurturing Managers
Chapter 24 Worker Contentions Chapter 25 Social Marginality and the Meiji
Entrepreneur Autobiographies Part 26 Self-Narration as Propaganda:
Autobiographies by Anarchists and Socialists in the 1920s Chapter 27
Leaning toward the Left Chapter 28 The Conversion of a Rebel Chapter 29
Self-Transformation through Activism Chapter 30 Memory Evoked by Memory
Chapter 31 The Final Days of the Capitalist Class Chapter 32 Depicting the
Upper Middle Class Chapter 33 Changes in the Socialist Movement Chapter 34
Katayama Sen's Path to Socialism Chapter 35 Katayam as the
Peasant/Proletariat Chapter 36 The Emergence of the Proletariat Chapter 37
Autobiographies of Counterhegemony Part 38 Part IV: Working Mothers:
Autobiographies by Japanese Women in the 1950s Chapter 39 Being a Wife and
a Mother Chapter 40 Departing from a Mother's Way Chapter 41 Yamakawa Kikue
as Wife and Mother Chapter 42 Ishigaki Ayako's Search for Memory Chapter 43
Positioning Women as Mothers Chapter 44 Balancing Work and Child Care
Chapter 45 An Accidental Career Woman Chapter 46 Self-Development through
Work Chapter 47 An Activist with a Child Chapter 48 Career over Housework?
Chapter 49 Part-Time Women and the Gendered Division of Labor Chapter 50
Working Mothers and Autobiography Part 51 Conclusion Part 52 Works Cited