What is modernity? : writings of Takeuchi Yoshimi

Bibliographic Information

What is modernity? : writings of Takeuchi Yoshimi

edited, translated, and with an introduction by Richard F. Calichman

(Weatherhead books on Asia)

Columbia University Press, c2005

  • : pbk

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Note

Originally published in Japanese by Chikuma Shobo

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Regarded as one of the foremost thinkers in postwar Japan, Takeuchi Yoshimi (1910-1977) questioned traditional Japanese thought and radically reconfigured an understanding of the subject's relationship to the world. His works were also central in drawing Japanese attention to the problems inherent in western colonialism and to the cultural importance of Asia, especially China. Takeuchi's writings synthesized philosophy, literature, and history, focusing not simply on Japan and the West but rather on the triangular relationship between Japan, the West, and China. This book, which represents the first appearance of Takeuchi's essays in English translation, explores Japanese modernity, literature, and nationalism as well as Chinese intellectual history. Takeuchi's research demonstrates how Asians attempted to make sense of European modernity without sacrificing their own cultural histories. An authentic method of modernity for Asia, Takeuchi concludes, needs to stress difference and plurality as opposed to the homogenizing force of westernization.

Table of Contents

Introduction Ways of Introducing Culture-Focusing Upon Lu Xun What Is Modernity? The Question of Politics and Literature Hu Shi and Dewey Overcoming Modernity Asia as Method

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