Japan: Its History and CultureMcGraw Hill Professional, 2004年9月21日 - 342 頁 Once a star of postwar industrial production and methods, Japan has encountered serious trouble with market forces in recent years. Social changes and departures from tradition are becoming more common in this conservative country. The revised edition of the popular work, Japan: Its History and Culture, Fourth Edition, documents and explains these changes. Seamlessly blending current events, politics, and cultural elements, the authors provide a riveting account of a nation often misunderstood by the West. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 10 筆
第 7 頁
... Yamato people do not begin in Yamato but farther west, and their movement is the first decisive episode traceable, though but faintly, in Japanese history. The Chinese of the Han dynasty, in their confident phase of military expansion ...
... Yamato people do not begin in Yamato but farther west, and their movement is the first decisive episode traceable, though but faintly, in Japanese history. The Chinese of the Han dynasty, in their confident phase of military expansion ...
第 10 頁
... Yamato region, which includes the Ise peninsula, today the site of the most sacred and revered shrines of Shinto. Section XLIV of the Kojiki (the “Record of Ancient Things”), the earliest written collection of the legends and dating ...
... Yamato region, which includes the Ise peninsula, today the site of the most sacred and revered shrines of Shinto. Section XLIV of the Kojiki (the “Record of Ancient Things”), the earliest written collection of the legends and dating ...
第 11 頁
... Yamato clan, deliberately decided to leave Kyushu about the first century a.d., in all probability in search of better agricultural land, and they made their way gradually along the coast of the Inland Sea. This journey probably took ...
... Yamato clan, deliberately decided to leave Kyushu about the first century a.d., in all probability in search of better agricultural land, and they made their way gradually along the coast of the Inland Sea. This journey probably took ...
第 12 頁
... Yamato by one Nomi-no-Sukune. He was the reputed inventor of the haniwa clay figures used to take the place of human sacrifices previously buried alive in a standing position at the funerals of the great. The Yamato-Izumo rivalry may ...
... Yamato by one Nomi-no-Sukune. He was the reputed inventor of the haniwa clay figures used to take the place of human sacrifices previously buried alive in a standing position at the funerals of the great. The Yamato-Izumo rivalry may ...
第 13 頁
... Yamato region. The northern part of the main island was still in possession of the Ainu, but the central and western portions of Japan were controlled by that amalgamation of peoples we know as the Japanese. Their society consisted of a ...
... Yamato region. The northern part of the main island was still in possession of the Ainu, but the central and western portions of Japan were controlled by that amalgamation of peoples we know as the Japanese. Their society consisted of a ...
內容
1 | |
4 | |
16 | |
28 | |
36 | |
End of the Heian Period 11581185 | 52 |
Kamakura Period 11851336 | 68 |
Nambokucho 13361392 Muromachi 13921573 | 81 |
19141931 | 168 |
19311945 | 178 |
15 Postwar Japan | 190 |
16 Japan TodayEconomy | 199 |
17 Japan TodayForeign Affairs and Political Life | 231 |
18 Contemporary Japanese Society | 261 |
Glossary | 297 |
Chronology | 301 |
13781490 | 88 |
SengokuJidai the Period of the Country at War 15341615 | 101 |
The Tokugawa Shogunate Part I 16151715 | 119 |
The Tokugawa Shogunate Part II 17161867 | 134 |
18681914 | 147 |
Bibliography | 321 |
Index | 325 |
About the Authors | 341 |
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