Le Moment Nipponiste (1888-1897): Nation Et Democratie a l'Ere Meiji
Synopsis
English summary: In the 1880s, an occasion arose "that only comes once every thousand years" the government promised the population a Constitution, and announced elections. In 1888, a group of intellectuals created the journal, Nihonjin ("the Japanese").They hoped to intervene in the political and social sphere since, for them, modernising the State was not enough: a true Nation had to be built. The Japanese people needed to see themselves as an integrated whole, as well as bearers of a singular identity that would contribute to world progress.The Japanese people's participation in their government and affirmation of a national spirit are two facets of a single idea that the journal's founders would strive to clarify and impose through their articles and commitments, which sometimes met with unexpected success. French description: In the 1880s, an occasion arose "that only comes once every thousand years" the government promised the population a Constitution, and announced elections. In 1888, a group of intellectuals created the journal, Nihonjin ("the Japanese").They hoped to intervene in the political and social sphere since, for them, modernising the State was not enough: a true Nation had to be built. The Japanese people needed to see themselves as an integrated whole, as well as bearers of a singular identity that would contribute to world progress.The Japanese people's participation in their government and affirmation of a national spirit are two facets of a single idea that the journal's founders would strive to clarify and impose through their articles and commitments, which sometimes met with unexpected success. English summary: In the 1880s, an occasion arose "that only comes once every thousand years" the government promised the population a Constitution, and announced elections. In 1888, a group of intellectuals created the journal, Nihonjin ("the Japanese").They hoped to intervene in the political and social sphere since, for them, modernising the State was not enough: a true Nation had to be built. The Japanese people needed to see themselves as an integrated whole, as well as bearers of a singular identity that would contribute to world progress. The Japanese people's participation in their government and affirmation of a national spirit are two facets of a single idea that the journal's founders would strive to clarify and impose through their articles and commitments, which sometimes met with unexpected success.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Les Belles Lettres
- ISBN: 9782251722306
- Number of pages: 256
- Dimensions: 219 x 160 mm
- Weight: 3810g
- Languages: French
