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Tradition Versus Modernization in Postwar Japan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 July 2024

Extract

Serious intellectuals in Japan have been concerned with problems of tradition and modernization not only in the postwar period but at least as far back as the Meiji Restoration, although it is true that in each period the problems were viewed in different ways. The issue of tradition and modernization is not peculiar to Japan. However, there are sufficient reasons for the fact that this issue has been and is being conspicuously argued among the Japanese.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1962 Fédération Internationale des Sociétés de Philosophie / International Federation of Philosophical Societies (FISP)

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References

1 A. Einstein, Out of My Later Years (1950, The Philosophical Library, N. Y.), p. 133.

2 "Daini-geizyutu" (second-rate art), published in Sekai, Nov. 1946.

3 Professor of Japanese literature of the Tokugawa period, former president of Nihon Bungaku Kyokai.

4 Poet and critic (1885-1912); revolutionary romantic; he renovated Tanka.

5 The review Bungakukai (Literary World) organized a symposium of writers and philosophers concerning the problem of "the conquest of modernity" and published the discussion in 1942. Most of the participants violently attacked science and modernity and demanded a return to national tradition.

6 Forerunner of contemporary popular literature; Daibosatsu-toge (1913-1944) is Japan's longest novel and probably the world's.

7 Leading author of popular literature; Miyamoto Musasi became the most popular during this war.

8 Historian, specializing in Japanese history.

9 Romantic writer (1868-1927); author of Hototogisu, the most popular novel in the Meiji era.

10 Greatest representative of modern Japanese literature (1867-1916); novels: I am a cat, After that, Mind, etc.

11 Novelist and founder of the review Bungei Syunzyu (1888-1948).

12 Statesman and encyclopedic scholar (1657-1725); first scientific historian of Japan; he wrote an excellent autobiography half a century before J.-J. Rousseau.

13 Philologue who studied Japanese classics with positivistic method (1730-1801).