The individual in Japanese history: Parallels to and divergences from the European experience |
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Authors: | Carmi Schooler |
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Affiliation: | (1) Laboratory of Socio-environmental Studies, National Institute of Mental Health, Room B1A-14, Federal Building, 7550 Wisconsin Avenue, 20892 Bethesda, Maryland |
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Abstract: | This paper shows that Japan underwent a sequence of historical periods during which the level of technical development and the place of the individual in society paralleled that of similar periods in Europe. Particular attention is paid to 16th-century Japan, a period remarkably similar to the European Renaissance in its individualism and socioeconomic and cultural vitality. In both Japan and Western Europe, this renaissance followed the breakdown of an imperium and its replacement by a feudal system. The historical parallel continues with those parts of Europe in which absolutist governments were successfully imposed, since Japan underwent a similar phenomenon, accompanied by a similar decline in individualism and in technological development. Although no definitive conclusions can be reached, the paper explores the implications of these parallels for our understanding of both Japan and the general historical and psychological processes involved in the growth of individualism and technology. |
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Keywords: | Japanese history European history individualism economic development |
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