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Heritage Politics - Shuri Castle and Okinawa's Incorporation into Modern Japan, 1879-2000 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,189
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Heritage Politics - Shuri Castle and Okinawa's Incorporation into Modern Japan, 1879-2000 (Paperback)
Series: AsiaWorld
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Heritage Politics: Shuri Castle and Okinawa's Incorporation into
Modern Japan, 1879-2000 is a study of Okinawa's incorporation into
a subordinate position in the Japanese nation-state, and the role
that cultural heritage, especially Okinawa's iconic Shuri Castle,
plays in creating, maintaining, and negotiating that position. Tze
May Loo argues that Okinawa's cultural heritage has been - and
continues to be - an important tool with which the Japanese state
and its agents, the United States during its 27-year rule of the
islands (1945-1972), and the Okinawan people articulated and
negotiated Okinawa's relationship with the Japanese nation state.
For these three groups, Okinawa's cultural heritage was a powerful
way to utilize the symbolism of material objects to manage and
represent the islands' cultural past for their own political aims.
The Japanese state, its agents, and American authorities have all
sought to use Okinawa's cultural heritage to control, discipline,
and subordinate Okinawa. For Okinawans, their cultural heritage
gave them a powerful way to resist Japanese and American rule, and
to negotiate for a more equitable position for themselves. At the
same time, however, this book finds that Okinawan strategies to
deploy their cultural heritage politically are deeply intertwined
with, and to a significant extent enabled by, precisely these
Japanese and American attempts to govern Okinawa through its
heritage. This examination of the political role of Okinawa's
cultural heritage is a window into a wider process of how
nation-states and other political formations make themselves
thinkable to the people they rule, how the ruled seek out spaces to
make claims of their own, and how cultural pasts, once made usable,
are implicated in these processes.
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