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[NOTE: Posted for Aiko Ikeo, 4 February 1997.]
Here are references for Japanese thought in the Tokugawa Preriod.
Maruyama, Masao (1974). Studies in the Intellectual History of
Tokugawa Japan. Translated by Mikiso Hane, University of Tokyo Press.
Translated from the Japanese original NIHON SEIJI SHISOSHI KENKYU
(University of Tokyo Press, 1952)
CONTENTS (scanned and corrected)
Translator's Preface vii
Introduction xv
Part I The Sorai School: Its Role in the Disintegration of Tokugawa
Confucianism and Its Impact on National Learning
I Introduction: The Formation of Tokugawa Confucianism
II The Chu Hsi Mode of Thought and Its Dissolution
III The Unique Characteristics of the Sarai School
IV The Sorai School's Relationship to National Learning,
Especially to the Norinaga School
V Conclusion
Part II Nature and Invention in Tokugawa Political Thought:
Contrasting Institutional Views
I The Problem
II Chu Hsi Philosophy and the Idea of Natural Order
III The Sorai School Revolution
IV The Historical Significance of the Transition from Nature to
Invention
V The Logic of Invention as Developed by Shoeki and Norinaga
Vl Further Developments and Stagnation in the Bakumatsu Period
Part III The Premodern Formation of Nationalism
I Introduction: The Nation and Nationalism
II National Consciousness under Tokugawa Feudalism
III Varieties of Premodern Nationalism
Bibliography
Index
Najita, Tetsuo (1987) Visions of Virtue in Tokugawa Japan. University
of Chicago Press.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
1. Prologue
2. The Philosophical Environment
3. In Search of Virtue: Founding the Kaitokudo
4. Between Eccentricity and Order:
History or Nature as First Principle
5. Visions from the Academy
6. Place of Dreams: Merchant Epistemology in
Late Eighteenth-century Osaka
7. Epilogue
Notes 311
Index 329
Najita, Tetsuo and Irwin Scheiner eds. (1978). Japanese Thought in
the Tokugawa Period, 1600-1868: methods and metaphors. University of
Chicago Press.
Najita, Tetsuo ed. (1993). Readings in Tokugawa Thought. University
of Chicago Press.
Nitobe, Inazo [1905] (1969). Bushido: The Soul of Japan; An
exposition of Japanese thought With an introduction by William Elliot
Griffis. Rutland, Vt., C. E. Tuttle Co.
Tamaru, Noriyoshi and David Reid (1996) Religion in Japanese Culture:
Where Living Traditions Meet a Changing World. Tokyo, New York and
London: Kodansha International.
This is a good introduction to Japanese religions.
CONTENTS of Part I SURVEY
1. Introduction Shigeru Matsumoto
2. Shinto Kenji Ueda
3. Buddhism Noriyoshi Tamaru
4. Christianity Norihisa Suzuki
5. Folk Religion Hitoshi Miyake
6. New Religions Ken Arai
Part II The Religious Situation Today
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Aiko Ikeo
Kokugakuin University, 4-10-28 Higashi, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo 150
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