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Ikki : Social Conflict and Political Protest in Early Modern Japan

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The reign of the Tokugawa shoguns was a time of statebuilding and cultural transformation, but it was also a period of ikki: peasant rebellion.

James W. White reconstructs the pattern of social conflict in early modern Japan, both among common people and between the populace and the government.

Ikki is the first book to cover popular protest in all regions of Japan and to encompass nearly three centuries of history, from the beginnings of the Tokugawa shogunate in the 1590s to the Meiji restoration. White applies contemporary sociological theory to evidence previously unavailable in English.

He draws on the long historical record of peasant uprisings, using narrative interpretation and sophisticated quantitative analysis.

By linking the texture of conflict to the political and economic regime the shoguns created, he casts doubt on competing interpretations of a contained, orderly society.

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RRP £51.00
Product Details
Cornell University Press
0801431549 / 9780801431548
Hardback
02/11/1995
United States
368 pages
155 x 235 mm, 907 grams