In Close Association

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American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions
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Bible Women
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education
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Freedom and People's Rights Movement
Freedom and People’s Rights Movement
gender
gender studies
history
Ishiguro Kan'ichiro
Ishiguro Orio
Ishigurō Kan’ichirō
Ishii Juji
Japan
Kajiro Yoshi
Language_English
Meiji Japan
missionaries
modernity
Nakagawa Yokotaro
networks
Okayama
Okayama Orphanage
Onishi Kinu
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politics
Price_€20 to €50
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samurai
social reform
social transformation
softlaunch
Sumiya Koume
transnational Christianity
women

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674278257
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Jul 2022
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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In Close Association is the first English-language study of the local networks of women and men who built modern Japan in the Meiji period (1868–1912). Marnie Anderson uncovers in vivid detail how a colorful group of Okayama-based activists founded institutions, engaged in the Freedom and People’s Rights Movement, promoted social reform, and advocated “civilization and enlightenment” while forging pathbreaking conceptions of self and society. Alongside them were Western Protestant missionaries, making this story at once a local history and a transnational one.

Placing gender analysis at its core, the book offers fresh perspectives on what women did beyond domestic boundaries, while showing men’s lives, too, were embedded in home and kin. Writing “history on the diagonal,” Anderson documents the gradual differentiation of public activity by gender in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Meiji-era associations became increasingly sex-specific, though networks remained heterosocial until the twentieth century.

Anderson attends to how the archival record shapes what historians can know about individual lives. She argues for the interdependence of women and men and the importance of highlighting connections between people to explain historical change. Above all, the study sheds new light on how local personalities together transformed Japan.

Marnie S. Anderson is Professor of History at Smith College.

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