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The Tokugawa Shogunate, which governed Japan for two and a half
centuries until the mid-1860s, classed people into hierarchically
ranked status groups (mibun). The early Tokugawa rulers legally
established these status groups through the late-sixteenth and
early-seventeenth centuries, adapting and clarifying existing
customary divisions between warriors, peasants, artisans, and
merchants. Subsequently, during the two and a half centuries of
Tokugawa rule, status laws backed by coercive force worked to limit
social mobility between groups and regulate relations between
people of different status. This book begins by examining the
origins and evolution of the outcaste groups within the Tokugawa
status order. It then looks into the complex processes leading up
to the abolition of outcaste status and the institution of legal
equality in 1871 under the Meiji regime, and analyzes subsequent
practices and theories of social discrimination against firstly
'former outcastes' and 'New Commoners' and then 'Burakumin'.
Finally, it analyses the tactics and strategies of liberation
adopted at local and national levels by anti-discrimination
movements in Meiji Japan. Detailing the history of early-modern
Japanese outcastes into the post-abolition era, Japan's Outcaste
Abolition explores the dynamics of national inclusion, social
exclusion, and the making of disciplined modern subjects. It will
therefore be of great interest to students and scholars of Japanese
history, culture and society, social history and Asian studies.
The Tokugawa Shogunate, which governed Japan for two and a half
centuries until the mid-1860s, classed people into hierarchically
ranked status groups (mibun). The early Tokugawa rulers legally
established these status groups through the late-sixteenth and
early-seventeenth centuries, adapting and clarifying existing
customary divisions between warriors, peasants, artisans, and
merchants. Subsequently, during the two and a half centuries of
Tokugawa rule, status laws backed by coercive force worked to limit
social mobility between groups and regulate relations between
people of different status. This book begins by examining the
origins and evolution of the outcaste groups within the Tokugawa
status order. It then looks into the complex processes leading up
to the abolition of outcaste status and the institution of legal
equality in 1871 under the Meiji regime, and analyzes subsequent
practices and theories of social discrimination against firstly
'former outcastes' and 'New Commoners' and then 'Burakumin'.
Finally, it analyses the tactics and strategies of liberation
adopted at local and national levels by anti-discrimination
movements in Meiji Japan. Detailing the history of early-modern
Japanese outcastes into the post-abolition era, Japan's Outcaste
Abolition explores the dynamics of national inclusion, social
exclusion, and the making of disciplined modern subjects. It will
therefore be of great interest to students and scholars of Japanese
history, culture and society, social history and Asian studies.
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