Challenging the Notions of Loyalty in State of War by Thomas Conlan

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Loyalty and honor are of the highest value in the eyes of the samurai. This is a statement that many scholars and young educated persons believe to be true on the basis of assumption. Thomas Conlan challenges this preconceived notion of loyalty and honor in his book State of War by piecing together a much more difficult and situationally based definition of loyalty which differed depending on the samurai and by observing how times of war and hardship truly challenged an individual’s sense of honor.

Loyalty is a difficult term to define when considering a couple of key factors. First of all, samurai had more than one aspect in which to be loyal. Samurai had to be loyal in respect to themselves and their own personal moral code and were expected to be loyal to the group for which they were fighting. Second of all, the Japanese word that is generally respected as meaning loyalty has an additional, vital translation. The Japanese term chusetsu has two distinct meanings: loyalty and service. Depending on how this word is translated, a phrase such as “battle chusetsu” can come t...

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