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Transcending Modernity? Individualism, Ethics and Japanese Discourses of Difference in the Post-War World
Oleh:
Clammer, John
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
Thesis Eleven vol. 57 no. 1 (Mei 1999)
,
page 65–80.
Topik:
ethics
;
individualism
;
Japan
;
modernity
;
postmodernity
Fulltext:
65TE571.pdf
(183.92KB)
Isi artikel
Intense debates have taken place in Japan about the country's role in the post-war world system and the question of whether Japan has achieved the modernity that makes it a member of and player in that system. These debates, however, have largely centred on a discourse of uniqueness, defined in cultural (and culturalist) terms. This domination of a single interpretative framework has suppressed alternative analyses of Japanese modernity. Some of the most significant of these alternative voices take the central question to be one not of culture, but of ethics. Some significant Japanese social theorists, including Maruyama Masao, a discussion of whose ideas forms the core of this paper, have argued that Japan has either not achieved true modernity or has only achieved a distorted version of it (and has certainly not attained to postmodernity), because as a civilization it has never evolved subjectivity understood as the appearance of the morally autonomous individual. Such ideas resonate interestingly with the ideas of some prominent western theorists of postmodernity and its ethics, especially with the work of Zygmunt Bauman. The debate between Bauman's characterization of 'postmodern ethics' and Japan poses fresh ways of rethinking Japanese modernity and puts new questions to western Japanology.
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