Western And Westernism In Japan

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The Meiji Revolution was a pivotal time period in Japanese history, a period during which Japan was rapidly industrialized and transformed through the efforts of a newly centralized, imperial government. As Western goods and technology permeated the nation, so did Western perspectives on morality and ethics enter the public view. However, such perspectives were not necessarily easily accepted; through the inspection of various primary sources, it becomes clear that, despite Japan’s rapid acceptance and adoption of Western technology and culture, there remained clear resistance toward Western views on social order.
During the Tokugawa era, the Japanese view of the West was undeniably negative. Aizawa’s “New Theses” begins by describing the “alien …show more content…

Progress, “the most beautiful thing in the world and…the law of all things moral and physical” according to Itagaki Taisuke, was now defined relative to how “civilized” a nation was, with the West “most highly civilized” and Japan “semideveloped” at best (Fukuzawa, “Theory of Civilization”). Fukuzawa Yukikichi does not hold back his praise of the West, boldly claiming that “Europe can only be called the highest level that human intelligence has been able to attain” and that “only the most ignorant thinks that Japan’s learning, arts, commerce, or industry is on a par with that of the …show more content…

With all their advancements in science and their political strength, Meiji Japan could not help but call the West “civilized.” Yet that they were civilized did not make them “better” people per se; Christianity was not “all that different in [its] general definitions of good and evil” (Fukuzawa, “Theory of Civilization”) and thus Japanese views of morality were seen as at least as equally valid—at least in this aspect, Japan’s “position at the vertex of the earth” (Aizawa) was never lost to the

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