Role of The Emperor in Meiji Japan-
Japan is a society whose culture is steeped in the traditions and symbols of the past: Mt. Fuji, the tea ceremony, and the sacred objects of nature revered in Shintoism. Two of the most important traditions and symbols in Japan; the Emperor and Confucianism have endured through Shogunates, restorations of imperial rule, and up to present day. The leaders of the Meiji Restoration used these traditions to gain control over Japan and further their goals of modernization. The Meiji leaders used the symbolism of the Emperor to add legitimacy to their government, by claiming that they were ruling under the "Imperial Will." They also used Confucianism to maintain order and force the Japanese people to passively accept their rule. Japanese rulers historically have used the symbolism of the Imperial Institution to justify their rule. The symbolism of the Japanese Emperor is very powerful and is wrapped up in a mix of religion (Shintoism) and myths. According to Shintoism the current Emperor is the direct descendent of the Sun Goddess who formed the islands of Japan out of the Ocean in ancient times.Footnote1 According to these myths the Japanese Emperor unlike a King is a
the fief system and concentrate power in the hands of a central who had been members of the imperialist movement eventually wound up of Japan shall be governed over by a line of Emperors unbroken for Stephen Large, The Japanese Constitutional of 1889 (London: Imperial decrees and slogans of loyalty to the Emperor also industrialists to invest in factories and increase exports and who taught at newly established schools and wrote revisionist history hypocritical and were violating the Imperial Will by negotiating and Confucianism and the Emperor to bolster the Imperial restoration laid Louis Allen, Japan the Years of Triumph (London: Purnell and Sons,
Some common words found in the essay are:
Confucianism Emperor, Emperor Meiji, Komeo Emperor, Japanese Emperor, Tokyo Japan, Rescript Education, Imperial Myth, Emperor Imperial, Shogunate Meiji, Meiji Emperor, education system, meiji era, imperial institution, emperor meiji, meiji oligarchs, meiji rulers, modern japan, meiji leaders, political history japan, peter duus, scribner sons, walter mclaren political, mclaren political history, rise modern japan, japan boston houghton,
Approximate Word count = 3833
Approximate Pages = 15 (250 words per page double spaced)
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