Okinawa 1818-1972 : inclusion and exclusion
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Okinawa 1818-1972 : inclusion and exclusion
(Japanese society series, . The boundaries of 'the Japanese' ; v. 1)
Trans Pacific Press, 2014
- : hardcover
- : softcover
- Other Title
-
「日本人」の境界
'Nihonjin' no kyōkai
The boundaries of "the Japanese"
"Nihonjin" no kyokai
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Library, Doshisha Women's College of Liberal Arts田
: hardcoverY210.6||O10205||1WA;2482004965,
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 380-404) and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The dynamics of inclusion and exclusion have operated for centuries in the island chain that constitutes Japan's southernmost prefecture, Okinawa - otherwise known as the Ryukyu Islands. Are the people of Okinawa 'Japanese' or not 'Japanese'?
Answers to this puzzling question are explored in this richly-detailed volume, written by one of Japan's foremost public intellectuals, historical sociologist Eiji Oguma. Here, Oguma addresses issues of Okinawan sovereignty and its people's changing historical, cultural, and linguistic identity, over more than 150 years until its 1972 reversion to Japanese control, following its administration by the US from the end of the Pacific War.
Table of Contents
Chronological Table
Acknowledgements
Map of the main island of Okinawa
Introduction
1 The Ryukyu Disposition (Ry?ky? shobun)
2 Okinawan Education and 'Japanisation'
3 The Creation of Okinawan Nationalism
4 The Distortion of Orientalism
5 Islands on the Boundary
6 From Pro-Independence to Pro-Reversion Discources
7 The Signifi cance of 'Japan, the Ancestral Land'
8 The Idea of Progressive Nationalism
9 The Dialect Placards of the 1960s
10 Anti-Reversion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Name Index
Subject Index
by "Nielsen BookData"