Splendid monarchy : power and pageantry in modern Japan

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Bibliographic Information

Splendid monarchy : power and pageantry in modern Japan

T. Fujitani

(Twentieth-century Japan : the emergence of a world power, 6)

University of California Press, 1998, c1996

  • : pbk

Available at  / 52 libraries

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Note

"First paperback printing 1998"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. 283-296) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Using ceremonials such as imperial weddings and funerals as models, T. Fujitani illustrates what visual symbols and rituals reveal about monarchy, nationalism, city planning, discipline, gender, memory, and modernity. Focusing on the Meiji Period (1868-1912), Fujitani brings recent methods of cultural history to a study of modern Japanese nationalism for the first time.

Table of Contents

LIST OF FIGURES AND MAPS PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I Introduction: Inventing, Forgetting, Remembering Nationalism and the Emperor in Tokugawa Japan Mnemonic Sites Toward a Historical Ethnography of the Nation-State Visual Domination PART I: NATIONAL MISE-EN-SCENE 2 From Court in Motion to Imperial Capitals Tokyo as Temporary Court (anzetisho) Out from behind Jeweled Curtains The Weight of the Imperial Past From Temporary Court to Imperial Capital (teito) National Landscape and National Narrative PART 2: MODERN IMPERIAL PAGEANTRY Overview 3 Fabricating Imperial Ceremonies Civilization, Prosperity, and Power Spectacles of Antiques 4 The Monarchy in Japan's Modernity The Emperor's Two Bodies The Politics of Gendering and the Gendering of Politics PART 3: THE PEOPLE 5 Crowds and Imperial Pageantry Imperial Pageants as National Communions Mobilizing the Masses Popular Folklore and the Folklore of the Regime 6 Epilogue: Toward a History of the Present The Monarchy and Tradition The Imperial Gaze NOTES BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX

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