Splendid Monarchy: Power and Pageantry in Modern Japan

封面
University of California Press, 1996 - 305 頁
In 1993, Masako Owada captured the world's attention when she agreed to marry Crown Prince Naruhito of Japan. She was widely portrayed as a progressive, Westernized woman about to enter one of the last bastions of traditional Japanese sexism. Crown Prince Naruhito's world was known to be steeped in ancient tradition, and the strictures placed on her were seen as tragic vestiges of the patriarchal past. But in this dramatic departure from accepted assumptions about Japan, T. Fujitani argues that just over a century ago, there was no such thing as an imperial family, imperial family, imperial wedding ceremonies were unheard of, and the image of the emperor as patriarch did not exist. Demonstrating how the trappings of the emperor were imported from nineteenth-century Western courts, he concludes that the Japanese monarchy as we know it is actually an invention of modern times. Fujitani focuses on public ceremonials and the construction of ritual spaces in the Meiji Period (1868-1912). His work is based on extensive research in Japanese archives and libraries, including the archives of the Imperial Household Agency. To explore the modern transformations of what is often portrayed as the longest continuously reigning monarchy in the world, he focuses on the monarchy's location within a modern regime of power, city planning, the media, and the gendering of politics. Throughout, he presents rare photographs and woodblock prints to trace the image of the emperor from a mysterious figure secluded inside a palanquin to a grand public personage riding in an open carriage in Western military regalia.
 

內容

Woodblock print Edo images of the emperor 1868
2
Nationalism and the Emperor in Tokugawa Japan
4
Toward a Historical Ethnography of the NationState
18
Visual Domination
24
From Court in Motion to Imperial Capitals
31
Overview
95
Fabricating Imperial Ceremonies
105
Woodblock print imperial procession by Inoue Tankei 1889
112
83
146
Postcard Meiji emperors hearse
150
Postcard funeral pavilion for Meiji emperors death rites
151
Photograph Meiji emperors hearse on display
153
The Monarchy in Japans Modernity
155
Woodblock print Meiji emperors procession 1868
167
Woodblock print Meiji emperor entering Tokyo by Ichiyokusai Kuniteru 1868
169
Woodblock print emperor and empress at Aoyama parade field by Inoue Tankei 1889
170

Glass photographic plate bronze gateway Yasukuni Shrine
122
34
123
Postcard bronze statue Yasukuni Shrine
125
Postcard arch at Shinbashi
128
Postcard arch at Sakuradamon
129
55
131
Postcard arch at Babasaki
134
Postcard weapons display on the Palace Plaza
135
66
137
Lithograph Meiji emperor on parade 1906
139
Photograph military review 1906
141
Commemorative postcard naval review 1905
142
Uchida Kuichis 1872 portrait of the Meiji emperor
175
Uchida Kuichis 1873 portrait of the Meiji emperor
176
Edoardo Chiossones 1888 portrait of the Meiji emperor
178
Woodblock print Meiji emperor leaving Tokyo by Yōshū Chikanobu 1881
179
Woodblock print Meiji emperor returning to Tokyo by Baidō Kokunimasa 1895
181
Crowds and Imperial Pageantry
197
Toward a History of the Present
230
NOTES
247
BIBLIOGRAPHY
283
INDEX
297
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關於作者 (1996)

T. Fujitani is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, San Diego.

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