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 6 到 10 筆結果,共 27 筆
第 7 頁
... Chinese influence. The Han Chinese thus became more closely aware of Japan, and the visit of a Japanese envoy to the Han court is recorded in a.d. 57. But it is in the Chinese records of the Wei dynasty, a smaller state subsequent to ...
... Chinese influence. The Han Chinese thus became more closely aware of Japan, and the visit of a Japanese envoy to the Han court is recorded in a.d. 57. But it is in the Chinese records of the Wei dynasty, a smaller state subsequent to ...
第 8 頁
... Chinese records state that the rulers are sometimes male and sometimes female, one powerful sovereign being a certain Queen Himeko or Pimiko, meaning “Daughter of the Sun.” This alternation between female and male rulers may indicate a ...
... Chinese records state that the rulers are sometimes male and sometimes female, one powerful sovereign being a certain Queen Himeko or Pimiko, meaning “Daughter of the Sun.” This alternation between female and male rulers may indicate a ...
第 12 頁
... Chinese records, the Yamato clan leader had become the dominant figure in Japan. Starting simply as primus inter pares, he reached the point of claiming a paramount role, a position to be dignified by the name of emperor after the Chinese ...
... Chinese records, the Yamato clan leader had become the dominant figure in Japan. Starting simply as primus inter pares, he reached the point of claiming a paramount role, a position to be dignified by the name of emperor after the Chinese ...
第 14 頁
... Chinese records, reveal more about the taboos of early Shinto. “They appoint a man whom they style 'mourning-keeper ... China and Korea, among them brocade weavers and scribes. Such skilled men were readily welcomed in Japan, and their ...
... Chinese records, reveal more about the taboos of early Shinto. “They appoint a man whom they style 'mourning-keeper ... China and Korea, among them brocade weavers and scribes. Such skilled men were readily welcomed in Japan, and their ...
第 15 頁
... Chinese culture that Korea had to offer. China was beginning to exert that strong cultural influence which all the countries on her periphery would sooner or later feel. The next stage of Japanese history was to see an extension of the ...
... Chinese culture that Korea had to offer. China was beginning to exert that strong cultural influence which all the countries on her periphery would sooner or later feel. The next stage of Japanese history was to see an extension of the ...
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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常見字詞
American army Ashikaga Ashikaga Shogun Asia attack bakufu battle became began Buddha Buddhist capital century China Chinese Choshu Christian clan Confucian corporate court culture daimyo death defeat Diet dominant early economic elected emperor force foreign Fujiwara global Heian Heian period Hideyoshi Hojo Ieyasu imperial important industrial islands Japa Japan Japanese Kamakura Kiyomori Koizumi Korea Kyoto Kyushu labor land leaders Manchuria Meiji ment military Minamoto Ministry modern monasteries Mongols monk Mount Hiei Nakasone Nara nese Nobunaga Osaka party peace percent period political position postwar premier prime minister Prince Shotoku Reform rice samurai Satsuma Scott Morton sect Shinto ships shogun social success sword Taiho Code Taika Reform Taira Taira Kiyomori temple tion Tokugawa Tokugawa Ieyasu Tokyo took trade traditional Treaty troops United warrior West Western women workers Yamato Yoritomo Yoshitsune