Mori Arinori's Life and Resources in AmericaLexington Books, 2004 - 163 pàgines 'Mori notes, 'Where men think that they know everything, and boast of their superior wisdom, the presumption is that they have yet much to learn.' . . . [T]oday's readers, whether in the United States, in Japan, or elsewhere, who may think they already know so much about the subject, will find much of value in Life and Resources in America.' --Akira Iriye, Harvard University, from the foreword Mori Arinori's Life and Resources in America was written by the young, educated ex-samurai the Japanese government selected as its first diplomatic representative in the United States. Originally published in English in Washington, D.C., in 1871, this book sheds much light on the shape of an American society, government, and economy recovering from the Civil War. Like earlier philosopher-tourists such as Alexis de Tocqueville and Harriet Martineau, Mori understands the United States as a stage upon which an important experiment in democracy, pluralism, and liberalism is unfolding. Life and Resources in America is distinct for its view from the Reconstruction period and by a non-European observer. Historian John E. Van Sant has annotated and lightly edited this uniquely illuminating text, making it readily accessible to the contemporary audience it deserves. |
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Resultats 1 - 5 de 30.
Pàgina ii
... Washington University Sin'ichi Kitaoka , Tokyo University Sharon Minichiello , University of Hawaii Masato Miyachi , Tokyo University T. J. Pempel , University of California , Berkeley Merry White , Boston University Titles in the ...
... Washington University Sin'ichi Kitaoka , Tokyo University Sharon Minichiello , University of Hawaii Masato Miyachi , Tokyo University T. J. Pempel , University of California , Berkeley Merry White , Boston University Titles in the ...
Pàgina xvii
... Washington , D.C. , paid relatively little attention to Japan because the crises over slavery , the Civil War , and Reconstruction diverted their attention from most foreign relations issues . On the other hand , Japanese officials paid ...
... Washington , D.C. , paid relatively little attention to Japan because the crises over slavery , the Civil War , and Reconstruction diverted their attention from most foreign relations issues . On the other hand , Japanese officials paid ...
Pàgina xviii
... Washington , D.C. , the Meiji government sent its first resident diplomat to the United States , a young man who had lived for a few years overseas and excelled at Western studies . MORI ARINORI'S WESTERN EDUCATION Mori Arinori ( 1847 ...
... Washington , D.C. , the Meiji government sent its first resident diplomat to the United States , a young man who had lived for a few years overseas and excelled at Western studies . MORI ARINORI'S WESTERN EDUCATION Mori Arinori ( 1847 ...
Pàgina xx
... Washington , D.C.15 With this appointment , Mori became Japan's first resident diplomat in the United States capital . Mori's fluency in English , his firsthand knowledge of the West and the United States , and his pedigree as a high ...
... Washington , D.C.15 With this appointment , Mori became Japan's first resident diplomat in the United States capital . Mori's fluency in English , his firsthand knowledge of the West and the United States , and his pedigree as a high ...
Pàgina xxi
... Washington legation were too willing to openly criticize Japan and Japanese society in conversations with Americans . Mori also had the exasperating habit of disagreeing with Kido , Iwakura , and other Japanese officials.19 To these ...
... Washington legation were too willing to openly criticize Japan and Japanese society in conversations with Americans . Mori also had the exasperating habit of disagreeing with Kido , Iwakura , and other Japanese officials.19 To these ...
Continguts
Official and Political Life | 5 |
Life among the Farmers and Planters | 15 |
Commercial Life and Developments | 31 |
Life among the Mechanics | 43 |
Religious Life and Institutions | 51 |
Life in the Factories | 69 |
Educational Life and Institutions | 81 |
Literary Artistic and Scientific Life | 93 |
Life in the Leading Cities | 119 |
Frontier Life and Developments | 129 |
Judicial Life | 135 |
Final Thoughts on America1 | 139 |
Religious Freedom in Japan | 141 |
The Religious Charter of the Empire of Dai Nippon | 149 |
Selected Bibliography | 151 |
155 | |
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Frases i termes més freqüents
acres agricultural amount annual believe Bible called century chapter chargé d'affaires Charles Lanman chiefly Chinese Christ Christian church Circuit civilization claim College comfort commercial connected cotton coun culture daimyō District employed England established extensive fact factories farm farmers fifty foreign Fukuzawa Yukichi give houses hundred important inhabitants institutions Ivan Parker Iwakura embassy Iwakura Tomomi Japanese Japanese students jurisdiction known labor land large numbers largest late laws leading live manufacture Meiji Meiji era Meiji government Meiji Restoration ment merchants miles millions of dollars minister Mori Arinori Mori's nation Niijima persons political population productions published regard religion religious Resources in America Sakoku samurai Satsuma schools sect ships society Supreme Court Territories Thomas Lake Harris thousand dollars tion Tokugawa Tokugawa bakufu Tokyo total number trade true United University various Washington West Western women writing York