The Taming of the Samurai: Honorific Individualism and the Making of Modern Japan

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Author: Eiko Ikegami

ISBN-10: 0674868099

ISBN-13: 9780674868090

Category: Japanese History

Modern Japan offers us a view of a highly developed society with its own internal logic. Eiko Ikegami makes this logic accessible to us through a sweeping investigation into the roots of Japanese organizational structures. She accomplishes this by focusing on the diverse roles that the samurai have played in Japanese history. From their rise in ancient Japan, through their dominance as warrior lords in the medieval period, and their subsequent transformation to quasi-bureaucrats at the...

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Modern Japan offers us a view of a highly developed society with its own internal logic. Eiko Ikegami makes this logic accessible to us through a sweeping investigation into the roots of Japanese organizational structures. She accomplishes this by focusing on the diverse roles that the samurai have played in Japanese history. From their rise in ancient Japan, through their dominance as warrior lords in the medieval period, and their subsequent transformation to quasi-bureaucrats at the beginning of the Tokugawa era, the samurai held center stage in Japan until their abolishment after the opening up of Japan in the mid-nineteenth century.This book demonstrates how Japan's so-called harmonious collective culture is paradoxically connected with a history of conflict. Ikegami contends that contemporary Japanese culture is based upon two remarkably complementary ingredients, honorable competition and honorable collaboration. The historical roots of this situation can be found in the process of state formation, along very different lines from that seen in Europe at around the same time. The solution that emerged out of the turbulent beginnings of the Tokugawa state was a transformation of the samurai into a hereditary class of vassal-bureaucrats, a solution that would have many unexpected ramifications for subsequent centuries.Ikegami's approach, while sociological, draws on anthropological and historical methods to provide an answer to the question of how the Japanese managed to achieve modernity without traveling the route taken by Western countries. The result is a work of enormous depth and sensitivity that will facilitate a better understanding of, and appreciation for, Japanese society. S. N. Eisenstadt - American Journal of Sociology [Ikegami's] analysis...constitute[s] a very important contribution combining historical, sociological, and anthropological approaches to the analysis of Japanese society and history...Full of very important insights.

IA Sociological Approach1Introduction31Honor, State Formation, and Social Theories15IIOrigins in Violence452The Coming of the Samurai: Violence and Culture in the Ancient World473Vassalage and Honor784The Rite of Honorable Death: Warfare and the Samurai Sensibility95IIIDisintegration and Reorganization1195Social Reorganization in the Late Medieval Period1216A Society Organized for War135IVThe Paradoxical Nature of Tokugawa State Formation1497Tokugawa State Formation1518An Integrated Yet Decentralized State Structure1649The Tokugawa Neo-Feudal State: A Comparative Evaluation177VHonor and Violence in Transformation19510Honor or Order: The State and Samurai Self-Determinism19711The Vendetta of the Forty-seven Samurai22312Proceduralization of Honor241VIHonor Polarization in Vassalic Bureaucracy26513State-Centered Honor and Vassalic Bureaucracy26714Hagakure: The Cult of Death and Honorific Individuality27815Confucian and Post-Confucian Samurai299VIIHonorific Individualism and Honorific Collectivism32716Themes of Control and Change329Epilogue: Honor and Identity370Notes381Index421Illustration 1. A medieval samurai's compoundIllustration 2. Victorious troops after the Heiji Rebellion of 1159Illustration 3. Kawanakajima Battle, 1561Illustration 4. The Tokugawa shogun receiving an audience of daimyo at Edo CastleIllustration 5. A fight between Kabuki mono, 1604Illustration 6. Samurai during the final phase of unification, around 1600-1615Illustration 7. Seppuku after the revenge of the Forty-seven Samurai, 1702Illustration 8. Greetings exchanged between Tokugawa samurai, late seventeenth centuryIllustrations are reproduced from the collections of Nishimura Hakubutsukan; Seikado; Tokugawa Reimeikai; Tokyo Kokuritsu Hakubutsukan; and Zenhoji

\ American Journal of Sociology[Ikegami's] analysis...constitute[s] a very important contribution combining historical, sociological, and anthropological approaches to the analysis of Japanese society and history...Full of very important insights.\ — S. N. Eisenstadt\ \ \ \ \ \ Asian AffairsEiko Ikegami's study of the samurai during Japan's feudal period is a book of considerable intellectual sophistication. The analysis is rigorous and elegant, and in the course of time will no doubt be regarded as the definitive statement on this subject...This is a superb book.\ — T. L. Richardson\ \ \ \ ChoiceThis book is a must for those who wish to know why Japan succeeded in its industrialization effort and how the otherwise paradoxical sense of collectivism versus individualism exists in Japan. General readers; upper-division undergraduates and above.\ — M.Y. Rynn\ \ \ \ \ \ Contemporary SociologyIkegami's mastery of the sources, not only for the Tokugawa Period but going all the way back to the beginning of Japanese history, is most impressive...One can learn a great deal about premodern Japanese society from this book.\ — Robert N. Bellah\ \ \ \ \ \ Foreign AffairsThis book has already been widely praised by prominent American political scientists and historians for answering how the Japanese achieved modernity without traveling the route taken by Western countries. At once a remarkable historical study of the samurai warrior class from its ancient origins to its transformation under the Tokugawa regime and a comparative study that makes Japan available for analysis alongside other great instances of state formation...Beautifully written. It will undoubtedly become standard reading in universities around the world.\ \ \ \ \ \ Harvard Journal of Asiatic StudiesIkegami offers persuasive, well-documented answers in this remarkable book. Two interwoven and recurring themes are central to her thesis. The first is the samurai ethos of what she labels 'honorific individualism' marked by an obsession with personal dignity, self-esteem, and reputation...The second is the unresolvable and dramatic conflict betwen autonomy and heteronomy—between the violence-based honor of the samurai elite and the need to control them under a collective political order. Ikegami explores the historical sites and paths of these themes, painstakingly tracing their origins, development, transformation, and recurrence. The final product is a historical sociology of Japan on a grand scale...The book deserves the attention of anyone interested in historical and comparative sociology or ethnography, cultural psychology, and enduring issues of individual freedom versus social order...Non-academic readers will find an educational and entertaining story in this elegantly written book.\ — Takie Sugiyama Lebra\ \ \ \ \ \ Japan QuarterlyIkegami's multidimensional approach fuses historical and political processes with an examination of four aspects of samurai life: the system of vassalage; the emergence of the ie, or house, as a social unit among the landed military elite; the military role of the samurai and the nature of warfare; and the relationship of the samurai class to other social classes...In addition to explaining the cultural origins of contemporary forms of social organization in Japan, The Taming of the Samurai makes a major contribution to the cross-cultural study of individuality and identity.\ — Janet Goff\ \ \ \ \ \ Journal of Japanese StudiesAn important contribution to Japanese sociology and history.\ — Carl Steenstrup\ \ \ \ \ \ Journal of Social HistoryThe story of how the forty-seven loyal retainers took revenge for their lord's death in 1703 is the most retold tale in Japanese literature and history, but Ikegami brings to it a fresh perspective based on her historical analysis of what honor meant in samurai society...Packed with ideas, this book is certain to be debated long and hard in Japnaese history circles. it is to be hoped that it will have a similar impact on scholars trying to understand the ingredients of state formation in societies around the world.\ — Anne Walthall\ \ \ \ \ \ Times Literary SupplementEiko Ikegami examines the nature and historical development of the samurai ethos, specifically concepts of honour, in the belief that the ideas which evolved among samurai in that context in pre-modern Japan do much to explain the paradox that a society almost universally regarded as conformist has undergone changes in the past 100 years that have been radical, even revolutionary, and owed much of their character to individual initiative. It is a very large subject...Professor Ikegami has produced a book of major importance for the understanding of Japan.\ \ \