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Nation, state, empire and war: Problems of liberalism in modern Japanese history and beyond 본문

제국-통치

Nation, state, empire and war: Problems of liberalism in modern Japanese history and beyond

달고양이 Friday 2015. 5. 15. 22:21

Tomoko Akamia, "Nation, state, empire and war: Problems of liberalism in modern Japanese history and beyond", Japanese Studies Volume 25,  Issue 2, 2005 pp.119-140.

 

Abstract

 

Liberalism in Japan before 1945 has been understood to be problematic because of its disposition to embrace elitism, nationalism and imperialism. These problems are often argued to have been caused by particular Japanese impediments, such as its history, customs, culture and system, and accordingly it is suggested that a ‘proper’ development of liberalism as seen in the ‘West’ did not occur in Japan. This essay argues that these problems are in fact problems inherent in the internal logic of liberalism in the modern period, and especially in the age of mass-based democracy and of empire. It argues so by expanding the thesis of Berlin on liberty of 1958, and examining the notion of ‘positive liberty’ in particular. The essay argues that the Japanese case articulates an often-neglected and problematic aspect of the discourse of liberalism, and concludes that this aspect needs to be seriously taken into account in an exploration of a critical alternative to currently dominant neo-liberal visions and institutions.


http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10371390500226043?journalCode=cjst20