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Plots and Motives in Japan's Meiji Restoration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

George M. Wilson
Affiliation:
Indiana University

Extract

Like other dramatic and discontinuous historical processes, the Meiji Restoration of 1868 possesses the inherent fascination to sustain yet another rehearsal of its basic course of events. The present one differs from others in several ways. It does not center on samurai heroes and villains contesting foreign incursion. Instead it identifies fully four groups that acted during the late Tokugawa era, the years 1850–68, known by the generic periodizing word bakumatsu—“the end of the bakufu,” that is, of the shogun's government situated at Edo. It presents each group according to the experiences and motives of its members. It points to the interactions between the four narrative structures, the plots or mythoi, but without homogenizing them into a unitary historiographical line. It also recognizes the necessary prefiguration of the historian's field but tries nevertheless to convey the perceived intentions of the four groups of historical actors.

Type
Perceptions of History
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1983

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References

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11 Totman, of course, is an exception to the general tendency to write the history of the winners. His Collapse of the Tokugawa Bakufu chronicles the dismal if enlightening human tragedy that befell the managers of the Tokugawa system despite their best intentions and efforts.

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46 My sense of structuralism generally follows the summary by Jean Piaget more than that of Peter Caws. Both are clear expositions of a movement whose “movers” refuse to acknowledge their likenesses, and both are prescient about the intellectual development of structuralism across many disciplines during the 1970s. Both identify linguistics as the source of inspiration for structuralism. But Piaget stresses the holism of structuralist systems in their synchronic approach to problems, whereas Caws emphasizes the patterns of binary opposites, polarities, and comple mentarities that are often employed to explicate structuralist arguments. See Piaget, Jean, Structuralism, Maschler, Chaninah, trans. (New York: Basic Books, 1970);Google ScholarCaws, Peter, “Structuralism,” Dictionary of the History of Ideas (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1973), IV, 322–30.Google Scholar

47 See Nagel, Ernest and Newman, James R., Gödel's Proof (New York: New York University Press, 1958), 36, 9899.Google Scholar