CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Award 2016. For more than 1500 years, Confucianism has played a... more CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Award 2016. For more than 1500 years, Confucianism has played a major role in shaping Japan's history - from the formation of the first Japanese states during the first millennium AD, to Japan's modernization in the nineteenth century, to World War II and its still unresolved legacies across East Asia today. In an illuminating and provocative new study, Kiri Paramore analyses the dynamic history of Japanese Confucianism, revealing its many cultural manifestations, as religion and as a political tool, as social capital and public discourse, as well as its role in international relations and statecraft. The book demonstrates the processes through which Confucianism was historically linked to other phenomenon, such as the rise of modern science and East Asian liberalism. In doing so, it offers new perspectives on the sociology of Confucianism and its impact on society, culture and politics across East Asia, past and present.
Ideology and Christianity in Japan shows the major role played by Christian-related discourse in ... more Ideology and Christianity in Japan shows the major role played by Christian-related discourse in the formation of early-modern and modern Japanese political ideology. The book traces the historical development of anti-Christian ideas in Japan from the banning of Christianity by the Tokugawa shogunate in the early 1600s, to the use of Christian and anti-Christian ideology in the construction of modern Japanese state institutions at the end of the 1800s. Kiri Paramore recasts the history of Christian-related discourse in Japan in a new paradigm showing its influence on modern thought and politics and demonstrates the direct links between the development of ideology in the modern Japanese state, and the construction of political thought in the early Tokugawa shogunate. Demonstrating hitherto ignored links in Japanese history between modern and early-modern, and between religious and political elements, this book will appeal to students and scholars of Japanese history, religion and politics.
Religion and Orientalism in Asian Studies analyzes the role of religion in past and present under... more Religion and Orientalism in Asian Studies analyzes the role of religion in past and present understandings of Asia. Religion, and the history of its study in the modern academy, has exercised massive influence over Asian Studies fields in the past century. Asian Studies has in turn affected, and is increasingly shaping, the study of religion. Religion and Orientalism in Asian Studies looks into this symbiotic relationship - both in current practice, and in the modern histories of both Orientalism and Area Studies
This article focuses on two examples of Confucian early childhood education in contemporary Taiwa... more This article focuses on two examples of Confucian early childhood education in contemporary Taiwan and Japan. Based on fieldwork conducted by the author in 2015, it contrasts the use of Confucianism in a grass-roots community early childhood educational setting in suburban Taipei with attempts to create elite Confucian “kids’ seminars” in central Tokyo. The study reveals the roles of gender, elitism, religious plurality, and modern early childhood pedagogy in the contrasting ways Confucianism manifests in these urban Taiwanese and Japanese settings. In doing so, it looks to contribute to wider discussions about the roles of modernity and tradition in contemporary religious revival in East Asia.
This chapter traces the contours of the Sinosphere as an information order. East Asian history h... more This chapter traces the contours of the Sinosphere as an information order. East Asian history has recently begun to offer up examples of early modern networks which both transcended cultural spheres in their own early modern times, and laid the ground for East Asian societies’ engagement with and later reworking of the modern global order. The main model in East Asia has been the intellectual networks facilitated by the Classical Chinese language and Confucian intellectual culture referred to by Joshua Fogel as the ‘Sinosphere’. In this chapter I will argue that just as Islam provided an important scheme of scientific and ethical conceptual orthodoxy for the establishment of an early modern (and pre-Western dominance) cosmopolis in Southwest Asia, so too Confucianism played a similar role in the Far East, with Chinese acting as a transnational lingua franca much like Persian, Arabic, and other languages across the Near East and South Asia.
How and why are universalist modes of political thought transformed into culturally
essentialist... more How and why are universalist modes of political thought transformed into culturally
essentialist and exclusionary practices of governance and law? This article considers
this question by analyzing the interaction between Confucianism and liberalism
in East Asia. It argues that liberalism, particularly as it was used in attacking
Confucianism, was instrumental in embedding ideas of cultural particularism and
cultural essentialism in the emergence of modern political thought and law in
both China and Japan. Both Confucianism and liberalism are self-imagined as
universalist traditions, theoretically applicable to all global societies. Yet in practice
both have regularly been defined in culturally determined, culturally exclusivist terms:
Confucianism as “Chinese,” liberalism as “British” or “Western.” The meeting of
Confucian and liberal visions of universalism and globalism in nineteenth-century
East Asia provides an intriguing case study for considering the interaction between
universalism and cultural exclusivism. This article focuses on the role of nineteenthcentury global liberalism in attacks upon the previous Confucian order in East Asia, demonstrating the complicity of liberalism in new, culturally essentialist and
particularist constructions of governance and law in both China and Japan.
This article argues that Chinese state intellectual approaches to medicine significantly influenc... more This article argues that Chinese state intellectual approaches to medicine significantly influenced the institutional reception of Western medicine in early modern Japan. Confucian-inspired general reforms of government in late eighteenth-century Japan encouraged an increase in state medical intervention, including the introduction of Western medical practices, achieved primarily through the use of trans-national Confucian intellectual knowledge apparatuses. Through a sociology of knowledge approach, this article analyzes the links between earlier private-sphere Chinese medical practice, late Chinese imperial state ideas on medicine, and early modern state-led medical Westernization in Japan. The article highlights the role of trans-Asian Confucian ideas, networks and practices in mediating new approaches to technical innovation, including those from the West. The position for Confucianism argued in the article thereby resonates with Bayly's idea of the early modern information order of India, and Pollock and Ricci's ideas on cosmopolitan discursive spaces in other parts of Asia.
This article argues that secularism is not an exclusively modern phenomenon, but is rather a recu... more This article argues that secularism is not an exclusively modern phenomenon, but is rather a recurring pattern which arises throughout different periods of premodern and modern history. I begin with a longue durée overview of Japanese history as a case study, proposing a regime of such historical cycles over a 1,200-year period. I then focus on changes in religious-political relations which occurred in one specific, important cycle, through the transition from the late medieval into the early modern period. I argue that this period ushered in a new form of political-religious relations where Neo-Confucianism, instead of Buddhism, for the first time represented the religious element in Japanese politics. I demonstrate how this early modern regime of political-religious interaction supported by Neo-Confucianism was particularly stable and functioned to support public discourse. In conclusion, the article notes the destruction of this early modern form of political-religious relations during East Asian modernization, and suggests that the continuing lack of a stable regime of political-religious relations in both contemporary China and Japan can be seen as an ongoing legacy of that destruction.
Late nineteenth and early twentieth century Japanese state-aligned scholarship's influence on:
1.... more Late nineteenth and early twentieth century Japanese state-aligned scholarship's influence on: 1. Formation of Japanese Studies in Europe 2. Development of Sinology globally 3. Foundation of Korean Studies 4. Formation of "Area Studies" in post-war U.S.
This article comparatively examines the political role of Confucian ritual in Tang Chinese and ea... more This article comparatively examines the political role of Confucian ritual in Tang Chinese and early Japanese history. New research on early Chinese ritual has recast it as a deliberately transformative social tool, a manufactured “as if” realm in which ideal relations are played out in full knowledge of their disjunction with the real world, in an attempt to order it. This article uses this understanding of ritual to analyze Confucianism in the practice of sacred kingship in early Japan, and by contrast in Tang China. I reexamine a number of well-known primary sources of early Japanese history in comparison with parallel Chinese sources of the Tang dynasty. Placing that comparison within the context of new developments in the historiography of China, Korea, and Japan, I argue that Confucianism's comparatively weak ritual positioning in Japan disabled its capacity to legitimate imperial rule there. The early Japanese state thus lacked one of the primary ritual tools employed in other parts of premodern East Asia to legitimate the power of new emperors and kings. I thus unpack one component in a wider process of East Asian cultural reproduction, which in the case of Japan contributed to the emergence of a state ultimately not ruled through imperial institutions or the emperor for most of its premodern history. The bifurcation of ritual and political power in sacred kingship, a seemingly geographically and temporally widespread phenomenon currently studied in various global histories, is explained in this article in terms of complex processes of cultural reproduction and transmission.
This article employs the history of Confucianism in modern Japan to critique current scholarship ... more This article employs the history of Confucianism in modern Japan to critique current scholarship on the resurgence of Confucianism in contemporary China. It argues that current scholarship employs modernist formulations of Confucianism that originated in Japan’s twentieth-century confrontation with Republican China, without understanding the inherent nationalist applications of these formulations. Current scholarly approaches to Confucianism trace a history through Japanese-influenced U.S. scholars of the mid-twentieth century like Robert Bellah to Japanese imperialist and Chinese Republican nationalist scholarship of the early twentieth century. This scholarship employed new individualistic and modernist visions of religion and philosophy to isolate fields of “Confucian values” or “Confucian philosophy” apart from the realities of social practice and tradition, transforming Confucianism into a purely intellectualized “empty box” ripe to be filled with cultural nationalist content. This article contends that current scholarship, by continuing this modernist approach, may unwittingly facilitate similar nationalist exploitations of Confucianism.
This article connects the histories of early modern and modern China and Japan, and also the hist... more This article connects the histories of early modern and modern China and Japan, and also the histories of early modern Catholic and modern Protestant Christian mission. By demonstrating how feudal concepts of mission from Japan infiltrated and undercut Chinese Jesuit mission in the seventeenth century, and how civilizational concepts of mission from China penetrated Japan in the nineteenth century, I argue that a shared and particularly politicized vision of Christianity and Western religiosity arose across East Asia. I suggest this vision then went on to have significant influence on methods of Chinese and Japanese resistance to modern Western imperialism, including in the formation of nation states in both countries.
Although some politics and international relations discourses continue to maintain that there is ... more Although some politics and international relations discourses continue to maintain that there is a causal link between secularism and political modernity, religious studies, anthropology, and history research over the past decade has been rather merciless in debunking this idea as one of the tropes of Western imperialism. This article considers at how Japanese political thinkers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries engaged this trope, and how that engagement contributed to the particular relationship between religion and governance that emerged in the modern Japanese empire (1868–1945). The article argues that developments in the Confucian political thought of the Tokugawa shogunate (1603–1868), particularly in the works of Ogyū Sorai (1666–1728) and Aizawa Seishisai (1792–1863), contributed significantly to the capacity of Japanese thinkers and politicians to creatively engage the role of religion in Western imperialism during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Journal of Japanese Studies 38:1 (2012). Countering arguments that Neo-Confucian political though... more Journal of Japanese Studies 38:1 (2012). Countering arguments that Neo-Confucian political thought encouraged stasis and authoritarianism in early modern East Asia, this article argues that reforms advanced by Confucians in the late Tokugawa state were usually designed to open government structures to bottom-up input in an attempt to make government more socially responsive. The article examines the causes and effects of the shogunate's establishment of a state academy and examinations system from 1788 onward. It concentrates on the role of state academicians in reforming Tokugawa processes of governance, suggesting that they effected the creation of a new structural engagement between knowledge and power.
Christian and anti-Christian ideas played a major role in the formation of modern Japanese nation... more Christian and anti-Christian ideas played a major role in the formation of modern Japanese national ideology. This article focuses on the construction of a sectarian history of the Tokugawa state as one part of the anti-Christian ideological writing of late nineteenth early twentieth century Japan. Academic and semi-academic writing on history and philosophy at this time was intimately connected with the major political debates which accompanied the introduction of the Imperial Constitution and the Imperial Rescript on Education. This article argues that these debates in many ways determined how these markers of state ideology would be interpreted in the future. Focusing particularly on the works of Inoue Tetsujir o and Inoue Enry o, this article shows how centrally historical discourses of sectarianism were deployed in the debates of the Meiji period, and how the historical, political and philosophical writings of figures like Enry o and Tetsujir o were integratedboth with each other, and with the pre-Meiji historical past.
Many late sixteenth/early seventeenth century Japanese Christian texts worked directly within arg... more Many late sixteenth/early seventeenth century Japanese Christian texts worked directly within arguments that could be found concurrently in Confucian, syncretist, and other traditions in Japan at this time. Japanese Christian thought has often been characterized as an example of the “non-Japanese” other, or as playing a primary role of “importing Western thought” during this period. This article argues, on the contrary, that the importance of many of the major currents of Japanese Christian thought actually lies precisely in the way they interacted with and within arguments which were not particular to the Christian tradition.
CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Award 2016. For more than 1500 years, Confucianism has played a... more CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Award 2016. For more than 1500 years, Confucianism has played a major role in shaping Japan's history - from the formation of the first Japanese states during the first millennium AD, to Japan's modernization in the nineteenth century, to World War II and its still unresolved legacies across East Asia today. In an illuminating and provocative new study, Kiri Paramore analyses the dynamic history of Japanese Confucianism, revealing its many cultural manifestations, as religion and as a political tool, as social capital and public discourse, as well as its role in international relations and statecraft. The book demonstrates the processes through which Confucianism was historically linked to other phenomenon, such as the rise of modern science and East Asian liberalism. In doing so, it offers new perspectives on the sociology of Confucianism and its impact on society, culture and politics across East Asia, past and present.
Ideology and Christianity in Japan shows the major role played by Christian-related discourse in ... more Ideology and Christianity in Japan shows the major role played by Christian-related discourse in the formation of early-modern and modern Japanese political ideology. The book traces the historical development of anti-Christian ideas in Japan from the banning of Christianity by the Tokugawa shogunate in the early 1600s, to the use of Christian and anti-Christian ideology in the construction of modern Japanese state institutions at the end of the 1800s. Kiri Paramore recasts the history of Christian-related discourse in Japan in a new paradigm showing its influence on modern thought and politics and demonstrates the direct links between the development of ideology in the modern Japanese state, and the construction of political thought in the early Tokugawa shogunate. Demonstrating hitherto ignored links in Japanese history between modern and early-modern, and between religious and political elements, this book will appeal to students and scholars of Japanese history, religion and politics.
Religion and Orientalism in Asian Studies analyzes the role of religion in past and present under... more Religion and Orientalism in Asian Studies analyzes the role of religion in past and present understandings of Asia. Religion, and the history of its study in the modern academy, has exercised massive influence over Asian Studies fields in the past century. Asian Studies has in turn affected, and is increasingly shaping, the study of religion. Religion and Orientalism in Asian Studies looks into this symbiotic relationship - both in current practice, and in the modern histories of both Orientalism and Area Studies
This article focuses on two examples of Confucian early childhood education in contemporary Taiwa... more This article focuses on two examples of Confucian early childhood education in contemporary Taiwan and Japan. Based on fieldwork conducted by the author in 2015, it contrasts the use of Confucianism in a grass-roots community early childhood educational setting in suburban Taipei with attempts to create elite Confucian “kids’ seminars” in central Tokyo. The study reveals the roles of gender, elitism, religious plurality, and modern early childhood pedagogy in the contrasting ways Confucianism manifests in these urban Taiwanese and Japanese settings. In doing so, it looks to contribute to wider discussions about the roles of modernity and tradition in contemporary religious revival in East Asia.
This chapter traces the contours of the Sinosphere as an information order. East Asian history h... more This chapter traces the contours of the Sinosphere as an information order. East Asian history has recently begun to offer up examples of early modern networks which both transcended cultural spheres in their own early modern times, and laid the ground for East Asian societies’ engagement with and later reworking of the modern global order. The main model in East Asia has been the intellectual networks facilitated by the Classical Chinese language and Confucian intellectual culture referred to by Joshua Fogel as the ‘Sinosphere’. In this chapter I will argue that just as Islam provided an important scheme of scientific and ethical conceptual orthodoxy for the establishment of an early modern (and pre-Western dominance) cosmopolis in Southwest Asia, so too Confucianism played a similar role in the Far East, with Chinese acting as a transnational lingua franca much like Persian, Arabic, and other languages across the Near East and South Asia.
How and why are universalist modes of political thought transformed into culturally
essentialist... more How and why are universalist modes of political thought transformed into culturally
essentialist and exclusionary practices of governance and law? This article considers
this question by analyzing the interaction between Confucianism and liberalism
in East Asia. It argues that liberalism, particularly as it was used in attacking
Confucianism, was instrumental in embedding ideas of cultural particularism and
cultural essentialism in the emergence of modern political thought and law in
both China and Japan. Both Confucianism and liberalism are self-imagined as
universalist traditions, theoretically applicable to all global societies. Yet in practice
both have regularly been defined in culturally determined, culturally exclusivist terms:
Confucianism as “Chinese,” liberalism as “British” or “Western.” The meeting of
Confucian and liberal visions of universalism and globalism in nineteenth-century
East Asia provides an intriguing case study for considering the interaction between
universalism and cultural exclusivism. This article focuses on the role of nineteenthcentury global liberalism in attacks upon the previous Confucian order in East Asia, demonstrating the complicity of liberalism in new, culturally essentialist and
particularist constructions of governance and law in both China and Japan.
This article argues that Chinese state intellectual approaches to medicine significantly influenc... more This article argues that Chinese state intellectual approaches to medicine significantly influenced the institutional reception of Western medicine in early modern Japan. Confucian-inspired general reforms of government in late eighteenth-century Japan encouraged an increase in state medical intervention, including the introduction of Western medical practices, achieved primarily through the use of trans-national Confucian intellectual knowledge apparatuses. Through a sociology of knowledge approach, this article analyzes the links between earlier private-sphere Chinese medical practice, late Chinese imperial state ideas on medicine, and early modern state-led medical Westernization in Japan. The article highlights the role of trans-Asian Confucian ideas, networks and practices in mediating new approaches to technical innovation, including those from the West. The position for Confucianism argued in the article thereby resonates with Bayly's idea of the early modern information order of India, and Pollock and Ricci's ideas on cosmopolitan discursive spaces in other parts of Asia.
This article argues that secularism is not an exclusively modern phenomenon, but is rather a recu... more This article argues that secularism is not an exclusively modern phenomenon, but is rather a recurring pattern which arises throughout different periods of premodern and modern history. I begin with a longue durée overview of Japanese history as a case study, proposing a regime of such historical cycles over a 1,200-year period. I then focus on changes in religious-political relations which occurred in one specific, important cycle, through the transition from the late medieval into the early modern period. I argue that this period ushered in a new form of political-religious relations where Neo-Confucianism, instead of Buddhism, for the first time represented the religious element in Japanese politics. I demonstrate how this early modern regime of political-religious interaction supported by Neo-Confucianism was particularly stable and functioned to support public discourse. In conclusion, the article notes the destruction of this early modern form of political-religious relations during East Asian modernization, and suggests that the continuing lack of a stable regime of political-religious relations in both contemporary China and Japan can be seen as an ongoing legacy of that destruction.
Late nineteenth and early twentieth century Japanese state-aligned scholarship's influence on:
1.... more Late nineteenth and early twentieth century Japanese state-aligned scholarship's influence on: 1. Formation of Japanese Studies in Europe 2. Development of Sinology globally 3. Foundation of Korean Studies 4. Formation of "Area Studies" in post-war U.S.
This article comparatively examines the political role of Confucian ritual in Tang Chinese and ea... more This article comparatively examines the political role of Confucian ritual in Tang Chinese and early Japanese history. New research on early Chinese ritual has recast it as a deliberately transformative social tool, a manufactured “as if” realm in which ideal relations are played out in full knowledge of their disjunction with the real world, in an attempt to order it. This article uses this understanding of ritual to analyze Confucianism in the practice of sacred kingship in early Japan, and by contrast in Tang China. I reexamine a number of well-known primary sources of early Japanese history in comparison with parallel Chinese sources of the Tang dynasty. Placing that comparison within the context of new developments in the historiography of China, Korea, and Japan, I argue that Confucianism's comparatively weak ritual positioning in Japan disabled its capacity to legitimate imperial rule there. The early Japanese state thus lacked one of the primary ritual tools employed in other parts of premodern East Asia to legitimate the power of new emperors and kings. I thus unpack one component in a wider process of East Asian cultural reproduction, which in the case of Japan contributed to the emergence of a state ultimately not ruled through imperial institutions or the emperor for most of its premodern history. The bifurcation of ritual and political power in sacred kingship, a seemingly geographically and temporally widespread phenomenon currently studied in various global histories, is explained in this article in terms of complex processes of cultural reproduction and transmission.
This article employs the history of Confucianism in modern Japan to critique current scholarship ... more This article employs the history of Confucianism in modern Japan to critique current scholarship on the resurgence of Confucianism in contemporary China. It argues that current scholarship employs modernist formulations of Confucianism that originated in Japan’s twentieth-century confrontation with Republican China, without understanding the inherent nationalist applications of these formulations. Current scholarly approaches to Confucianism trace a history through Japanese-influenced U.S. scholars of the mid-twentieth century like Robert Bellah to Japanese imperialist and Chinese Republican nationalist scholarship of the early twentieth century. This scholarship employed new individualistic and modernist visions of religion and philosophy to isolate fields of “Confucian values” or “Confucian philosophy” apart from the realities of social practice and tradition, transforming Confucianism into a purely intellectualized “empty box” ripe to be filled with cultural nationalist content. This article contends that current scholarship, by continuing this modernist approach, may unwittingly facilitate similar nationalist exploitations of Confucianism.
This article connects the histories of early modern and modern China and Japan, and also the hist... more This article connects the histories of early modern and modern China and Japan, and also the histories of early modern Catholic and modern Protestant Christian mission. By demonstrating how feudal concepts of mission from Japan infiltrated and undercut Chinese Jesuit mission in the seventeenth century, and how civilizational concepts of mission from China penetrated Japan in the nineteenth century, I argue that a shared and particularly politicized vision of Christianity and Western religiosity arose across East Asia. I suggest this vision then went on to have significant influence on methods of Chinese and Japanese resistance to modern Western imperialism, including in the formation of nation states in both countries.
Although some politics and international relations discourses continue to maintain that there is ... more Although some politics and international relations discourses continue to maintain that there is a causal link between secularism and political modernity, religious studies, anthropology, and history research over the past decade has been rather merciless in debunking this idea as one of the tropes of Western imperialism. This article considers at how Japanese political thinkers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries engaged this trope, and how that engagement contributed to the particular relationship between religion and governance that emerged in the modern Japanese empire (1868–1945). The article argues that developments in the Confucian political thought of the Tokugawa shogunate (1603–1868), particularly in the works of Ogyū Sorai (1666–1728) and Aizawa Seishisai (1792–1863), contributed significantly to the capacity of Japanese thinkers and politicians to creatively engage the role of religion in Western imperialism during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Journal of Japanese Studies 38:1 (2012). Countering arguments that Neo-Confucian political though... more Journal of Japanese Studies 38:1 (2012). Countering arguments that Neo-Confucian political thought encouraged stasis and authoritarianism in early modern East Asia, this article argues that reforms advanced by Confucians in the late Tokugawa state were usually designed to open government structures to bottom-up input in an attempt to make government more socially responsive. The article examines the causes and effects of the shogunate's establishment of a state academy and examinations system from 1788 onward. It concentrates on the role of state academicians in reforming Tokugawa processes of governance, suggesting that they effected the creation of a new structural engagement between knowledge and power.
Christian and anti-Christian ideas played a major role in the formation of modern Japanese nation... more Christian and anti-Christian ideas played a major role in the formation of modern Japanese national ideology. This article focuses on the construction of a sectarian history of the Tokugawa state as one part of the anti-Christian ideological writing of late nineteenth early twentieth century Japan. Academic and semi-academic writing on history and philosophy at this time was intimately connected with the major political debates which accompanied the introduction of the Imperial Constitution and the Imperial Rescript on Education. This article argues that these debates in many ways determined how these markers of state ideology would be interpreted in the future. Focusing particularly on the works of Inoue Tetsujir o and Inoue Enry o, this article shows how centrally historical discourses of sectarianism were deployed in the debates of the Meiji period, and how the historical, political and philosophical writings of figures like Enry o and Tetsujir o were integratedboth with each other, and with the pre-Meiji historical past.
Many late sixteenth/early seventeenth century Japanese Christian texts worked directly within arg... more Many late sixteenth/early seventeenth century Japanese Christian texts worked directly within arguments that could be found concurrently in Confucian, syncretist, and other traditions in Japan at this time. Japanese Christian thought has often been characterized as an example of the “non-Japanese” other, or as playing a primary role of “importing Western thought” during this period. This article argues, on the contrary, that the importance of many of the major currents of Japanese Christian thought actually lies precisely in the way they interacted with and within arguments which were not particular to the Christian tradition.
Haiyaso, a short text found in the collected works of the early Tokugawa Confucian Hayashi Razan ... more Haiyaso, a short text found in the collected works of the early Tokugawa Confucian Hayashi Razan (1583–1657), purports to be a record of a debate held in 1606 between Razan and the famous Japanese Jesuit scholastic Habian (1585–1621). The debate is presented in the text as a confrontation between Confucianism and Christianity. In the modern period, right up to the present, the text has been used prolifically to present a conflict between "Western thought and East Asian intellectual systems" as one of the central stories of the intellectual history of early seventeenth-century Japan. In this sense, the text has been used to justify the imposition of fashionable modern dichotomies – between ‘East and West’ and ‘rational and religious’ – onto the intellectual history of Tokugawa Japan. This outlook has been supported by an inaccurate representation of Habian’s Jesuit period treatise Myotei mondo as some kind of ‘introduction to Western thought’. In fact, Myotei mondo is a much more complex work which, among other things, shows the clear influence of Confucian and Neo-Confucian humanism. This article goes back to the extant source documents of indigenous Japanese Jesuit thought, and the attacks on it in the early seventeenth century. Through examining the ideas of Habian in contrast with other Japanese and Chinese Jesuit texts, and by analysing the context within which Haiyaso sits in Hayashi Razan’s collected documents, the paper demonstrates that Haiyaso was a fabrication, in the sense that it is a work of propaganda probably written well after Habian’s death, and imputing to Habian views that he clearly did not hold.
For more than 1500 years, Confucianism has played a major role in shaping Japan's history - from ... more For more than 1500 years, Confucianism has played a major role in shaping Japan's history - from the formation of the first Japanese states during the first millennium AD, to Japan's modernization in the nineteenth century, to World War II and its still unresolved legacies across East Asia today. In an illuminating and provocative new study, Kiri Paramore analyses the dynamic history of Japanese Confucianism, revealing its many cultural manifestations, as religion and as a political tool, as social capital and public discourse, as well as its role in international relations and statecraft. The book demonstrates the processes through which Confucianism was historically linked to other phenomenon, such as the rise of modern science and East Asian liberalism. In doing so, it offers new perspectives on the sociology of Confucianism and its impact on society, culture and politics across East Asia, past and present.
This volume investigates the relationship between archives and information in the early modern world. It explores how the physical documentation that proliferated on an unprecedented scale between the 16th and 18th centuries was managed in the context of wider innovations in the sphere of communication and of significant upheaval and change. The chapters assess how archives were implicated in patterns of statecraft and scrutinise critical issues of secrecy and publicity, access and concealment. They analyse the interconnections between documentation and geographical distance, probing the part played by record-keeping in administration, governance, and justice, as well as its links with trade, commerce, education, evangelism, and piety. Alive to how the contents of archives were organised and filed, the contributors place paper technologies and physical repositories under the microscope. Extending beyond the framework of formal institutions to the family, household, and sect, this volume offers fresh insight into the possibilities and constraints of political participation and the nature of human agency. It deepens our understanding of the role of archives in the construction and preservation of knowledge and the exercise of power in its broadest sense. Above all, it calls for greater dialogue and creative collaboration to breach the lingering disciplinary divide between historians and archival scientists.
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Books by Kiri Paramore
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essentialist and exclusionary practices of governance and law? This article considers
this question by analyzing the interaction between Confucianism and liberalism
in East Asia. It argues that liberalism, particularly as it was used in attacking
Confucianism, was instrumental in embedding ideas of cultural particularism and
cultural essentialism in the emergence of modern political thought and law in
both China and Japan. Both Confucianism and liberalism are self-imagined as
universalist traditions, theoretically applicable to all global societies. Yet in practice
both have regularly been defined in culturally determined, culturally exclusivist terms:
Confucianism as “Chinese,” liberalism as “British” or “Western.” The meeting of
Confucian and liberal visions of universalism and globalism in nineteenth-century
East Asia provides an intriguing case study for considering the interaction between
universalism and cultural exclusivism. This article focuses on the role of nineteenthcentury global liberalism in attacks upon the previous Confucian order in East Asia, demonstrating the complicity of liberalism in new, culturally essentialist and
particularist constructions of governance and law in both China and Japan.
1. Formation of Japanese Studies in Europe
2. Development of Sinology globally
3. Foundation of Korean Studies
4. Formation of "Area Studies" in post-war U.S.
individualistic and modernist visions of religion and philosophy to isolate fields of “Confucian values” or “Confucian philosophy” apart from the realities of social practice and tradition, transforming Confucianism into a purely intellectualized “empty box” ripe to be filled with cultural nationalist content. This article contends that current scholarship, by continuing this modernist approach, may unwittingly facilitate similar nationalist exploitations of Confucianism.
essentialist and exclusionary practices of governance and law? This article considers
this question by analyzing the interaction between Confucianism and liberalism
in East Asia. It argues that liberalism, particularly as it was used in attacking
Confucianism, was instrumental in embedding ideas of cultural particularism and
cultural essentialism in the emergence of modern political thought and law in
both China and Japan. Both Confucianism and liberalism are self-imagined as
universalist traditions, theoretically applicable to all global societies. Yet in practice
both have regularly been defined in culturally determined, culturally exclusivist terms:
Confucianism as “Chinese,” liberalism as “British” or “Western.” The meeting of
Confucian and liberal visions of universalism and globalism in nineteenth-century
East Asia provides an intriguing case study for considering the interaction between
universalism and cultural exclusivism. This article focuses on the role of nineteenthcentury global liberalism in attacks upon the previous Confucian order in East Asia, demonstrating the complicity of liberalism in new, culturally essentialist and
particularist constructions of governance and law in both China and Japan.
1. Formation of Japanese Studies in Europe
2. Development of Sinology globally
3. Foundation of Korean Studies
4. Formation of "Area Studies" in post-war U.S.
individualistic and modernist visions of religion and philosophy to isolate fields of “Confucian values” or “Confucian philosophy” apart from the realities of social practice and tradition, transforming Confucianism into a purely intellectualized “empty box” ripe to be filled with cultural nationalist content. This article contends that current scholarship, by continuing this modernist approach, may unwittingly facilitate similar nationalist exploitations of Confucianism.
edited with Kate Peters and Alexandra Walsham
This volume investigates the relationship between archives and information in the early modern world. It explores how the physical documentation that proliferated on an unprecedented scale between the 16th and 18th centuries was managed in the context of wider innovations in the sphere of communication and of significant upheaval and change. The chapters assess how archives were implicated in patterns of statecraft and scrutinise critical issues of secrecy and publicity, access and concealment. They analyse the interconnections between documentation and geographical distance, probing the part played by record-keeping in administration, governance, and justice, as well as its links with trade, commerce, education, evangelism, and piety. Alive to how the contents of archives were organised and filed, the contributors place paper technologies and physical repositories under the microscope. Extending beyond the framework of formal institutions to the family, household, and sect, this volume offers fresh insight into the possibilities and constraints of political participation and the nature of human agency. It deepens our understanding of the role of archives in the construction and preservation of knowledge and the exercise of power in its broadest sense. Above all, it calls for greater dialogue and creative collaboration to breach the lingering disciplinary divide between historians and archival scientists.
All information: https://global.oup.com/academic/product/archives-and-information-in-the-early-modern-world-9780197266250?lang=en&cc=gb#