Meiji protestantism in history and historiography : a comparative study of Japanese and Western interpretation of early protestantism in Japan
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Meiji protestantism in history and historiography : a comparative study of Japanese and Western interpretation of early protestantism in Japan
(Studien zur interkulturellen Geschichte des Christentums = Études d'histoire interculturelle du christianisme = Studies in the intercultural history of Christianity, Bd. 58)
Lang, c1989
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Note
Originally presented as thesis (doctoral)--Uppsala, 1988
Bibliography p. 148-174
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The interpretation of the Meiji Protestant legacy remains a basic question of Japanese Church History, largely due to Japanese Christian self-criticism after the Pacific War. Through a comparative approach, the present study focuses on how the Meiji Protestant legacy is interpreted in Japanese and Western milieux from 1872 until 1945. In Japan, ecclesiastical, social and individualist interpretations emerge. The historical concern with Meiji Protestantism reaches a climax in the patriotic 1930s. The Western study of Meiji Protestant History, which up to 1909 focused on traditional tenets of mission history, continuity and expansion, thereafter gradually loses its vigour and turns into a general missiological interest. Post-War interpretative developments in Japan and in the West generally follow pre-War patterns. The emerging interpretative history is seen against its background in Japanese and Western ecclesiastical and social milieux.
Table of Contents
Contents: Transition from Tokugawa to Meiji Society - Japanese Protestant Foundation (1872-1906) - Reflections on Meiji Protestantism during the Foundation Period (1872-1905), during the Period of Transition (1906-1929) and during the Dark Years (1930-1945).
by "Nielsen BookData"