Read A History of Japan: From Stone Age to Superpower Online
Authors: Kenneth Henshall
Yamaguchi, K., 1983, ‘Early Modern Economy (1868–1945)’, in
KEJ
, v.2, pp151–4.
Yamamura, K., 1986, ‘The Meiji Land Tax Reform and Its Effects’, in Jansen and Rozman 86, pp382–9.
Yanai, S., 1992, ‘The Case for a Coup’,
Japan Views
, December 1992, pp3–6 ( Japanese orig. in
Sh
kan Bunshun
22 Oct. 92).
Yokota, Y., 1992, ‘Volunteer’, in Cook and Cook 92, pp306–13.y
Yoshida, S., 1961,
The Yoshida Memoirs: The Story of Japan in Crisis
, Heinemann, London.
Yoshimi, Y., 2000,
Comfort Women: Sexual Slavery in the Japanese Military During World War II
(tr. O’Brien, S.), Columbia University Press.
G
LOSSARY OF
J
APANESE
T
ERMS
ama | | nun, also a term for female divers noted for holding their breath for many minutes |
amae | | child-like dependence on others |
animé | | animated cartoons |
aware | | see mono no aware |
bakufu | | military government, sh gunate |
bunraku | | puppet drama |
burakumin | | ‘hamlet people’, social outcasts |
bushi | | warrior, often samurai |
bushid | | way of warrior/ samurai |
but netsu | | ‘dance fever’, applied to early Meiji cabinet |
ch nin | | townspeople |
ch ninmono | | tales of merchant success in Tokugawa period |
ch zen naikaku | | ‘transcendental cabinets’ of Meiji government |
daimy | | feudal lord, esp. in Tokugawa period |
endaka | | ‘high yen’ of late 1980s |
enjo k sai | | ‘financially assisted relationship’ between young teenage girl and older male |
eta | | ‘great filth’, nowadays burakumin |
fudai | | daimy traditionally loyal to Tokugawa house |
fukoku ky hei | | ‘rich nation, strong army’, slogan popular in early Meiji period |
fur sha | | drifters |
geisha | | ‘artistic person’, originally male but now exclusively female, who entertains clients and at times also functions as a prostitute |
genr | | ‘original elder’, oligarchs of early Meiji government |
gunki monogatari | | medieval warrior tales |
gy sei kanri | | administrative guidance, esp. of economy by government |