Lust, Commerce, and Corruption: An Account Of What I Have Seen And Heard, By An Edo Samurai, Abridged Edition

Édition Kate Wildman Nakai , Mark Teeuwen
With Fumiko Miyazaki
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Lust, Commerce, and Corruption: An Account Of What I Have Seen And Heard, By An Edo Samurai, Abridged Edition

Édition Kate Wildman Nakai , Mark Teeuwen
With Fumiko Miyazaki
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Trouvé dans : History & Political Science, Asian History

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  • Date de publication : Mar 28, 2017
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 296
  • Éditeur : Columbia University Press
  • ISBN : 9780231182775
  • Dimensions : 6.0" W x 1.0" L x 9.0" H
Mark Teeuwen is professor in Japanese studies at the University of Oslo. He is a historian of Japanese religion, with special focus on the history of Shinto.

Kate Wildman Nakai is professor emerita at Sophia University, Tokyo. Her research focuses on Tokugawa and modern history, with an emphasis on intellectual developments.

Fumiko Miyazaki is professor emerita at Keisen University in Tokyo. Her research focuses on Tokugawa religion and society.

Anne Walthall is professor emerita at the University of California, Irvine. Her research focuses on society and gender during the Tokugawa period.

John Breen is a professor at the International Research Center for Japanese Studies, Kyoto, where he edits the journal Japan Review. His research focuses on issues of state and religion in Japan.
This is not the familiar Edo-period Japan you've studied in class. It is instead a cynical, critical, no-holds-barred account of all that an observant samurai found wrong with his society. Corruption, degeneration, destitution, monks on the make: it is a world in decline that he depicts, and the superb introduction puts it all in context. Things may not have been quite as he says, but this is firsthand testimony from somebody who was there and it lays barethe mentalities of the age.

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