Book contents
- The Meiji Restoration
- The Meiji Restoration
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Conventions
- Introduction
- Part 1 Global Connections
- Part 2 Internal Conflicts
- Part 3 Domestic Resolutions
- 9 Settling the Frontier, Defending the North
- 10 Locally Ancient and Globally Modern
- 11 Ornamental Diplomacy
- 12 The Restoration of the Ancient Capitals of Nara and Kyoto and International Cultural Legitimacy in Meiji Japan
- Suggestions for Further Reading
- Index
10 - Locally Ancient and Globally Modern
Restoration Discourse and the Tensions of Modernity
from Part 3 - Domestic Resolutions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 April 2020
- The Meiji Restoration
- The Meiji Restoration
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Conventions
- Introduction
- Part 1 Global Connections
- Part 2 Internal Conflicts
- Part 3 Domestic Resolutions
- 9 Settling the Frontier, Defending the North
- 10 Locally Ancient and Globally Modern
- 11 Ornamental Diplomacy
- 12 The Restoration of the Ancient Capitals of Nara and Kyoto and International Cultural Legitimacy in Meiji Japan
- Suggestions for Further Reading
- Index
Summary
This chapter explains how the Meiji Restoration embodied two profound contradictions. The new government described its actions and policies both as a “revival of ancient kingly rule” (ōsei fukko), but also as a revolution (isshin). These phrases were in nominally in opposition: fukko referred explicitly to the ancient past, while isshin declared on the contrary, that all was being made new. That contrast reveals how Meiji leaders embraced radical reform, but connected it to the renewal of ancient ways. While describing reform as ancient, the government also reconciled a celebration of Japanese uniqueness with the adoption of Western ideas and technologies. Government discourse therefore contained the dual tensions of “new vs. ancient” and “foreign vs. uniquely Japanese.” As this chapter reveals, these tensions are most evident in the iconography of Japanese banknotes, where the government sought to craft a national history that was both distinctly Japanese and analogous to Western models. The banknotes were thus simultaneously an emulation of the West and a celebration of ancient Japanese legends.
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- The Meiji RestorationJapan as a Global Nation, pp. 212 - 231Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020
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