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Public Properties : Museums in Imperial Japan, Paperback by Aso, Noriko, Like...
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Item specifics
- Condition
- Book Title
- Public Properties : Museums in Imperial Japan
- ISBN
- 9780822354291
- Subject Area
- Travel, Art, History
- Publication Name
- Public Properties : Museums in Imperial Japan
- Publisher
- Duke University Press
- Item Length
- 9.2 in
- Subject
- Asia / Japan, Museums, Tours, Points of Interest, History / General
- Publication Year
- 2013
- Series
- Asia-Pacific: Culture, Politics, and Society Ser.
- Type
- Textbook
- Format
- Trade Paperback
- Language
- English
- Item Height
- 0.9 in
- Item Weight
- 15.2 Oz
- Item Width
- 6.1 in
- Number of Pages
- 320 Pages
About this product
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Duke University Press
ISBN-10
0822354292
ISBN-13
9780822354291
eBay Product ID (ePID)
167693627
Product Key Features
Number of Pages
320 Pages
Publication Name
Public Properties : Museums in Imperial Japan
Language
English
Publication Year
2013
Subject
Asia / Japan, Museums, Tours, Points of Interest, History / General
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Travel, Art, History
Series
Asia-Pacific: Culture, Politics, and Society Ser.
Format
Trade Paperback
Dimensions
Item Height
0.9 in
Item Weight
15.2 Oz
Item Length
9.2 in
Item Width
6.1 in
Additional Product Features
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
LCCN
2013-018958
Dewey Edition
23
Reviews
Aso has provided an excellent, and much-needed, history of exhibition spaces and practices in twentieth-century imperial Japan. This study fills an important gap in English-language museum studies scholarship and will be useful reading for scholars of Japanese history, twentieth-century visual culture, and colonial studies., [ Public Properties is] of interest to Japan and East Asia scholars as well as museum studies specialists.... [The] book is a welcome addition to one of the most vibrant recent areas of scholarly attention, the place of aesthetics in the creation of modern Japanese nationalism., "[A]n important contribution to the emerging scholarship on museums as public properties in Japan during the Imperial period and is one for those interested in Japanese history, art history and museum studies." , " Public Properties demonstrates that Japan's development of museums reflected its growth into a modern nation-state. Yet the book is more than a history of the museum in modern Japan. Noriko Aso offers a comprehensive account of how public and private institutions came together in the formation of national and imperial ideals, pointing out how museums in Japan's colonies were conceived to take advantage of local conditions while emphasizing the larger mission of empire."-- Stefan Tanaka , author of New Times in Modern Japan, " Public Properties will be an important book in Japanese history and intersecting fields including colonial studies, public culture, art history, and museum studies. Noriko Aso shows how integral a modern museum culture was to the formation of an 'imperial public' in Japan during the late nineteenth century and early twentieth. She provides original perspectives on questions of collective identity and political culture during the imperial era and sheds new light on key issues in the field of modern Japanese history."- Leslie Pincus , author of Authenticating Culture in Imperial Japan: Kuku Shuzo and the Rise of National Aesthetics, . . . this book could easily be used as an exciting portal for introducing students to diverse aspects of modern Japanese history and its clever theoretical framework will undoubtedly serve Japan scholars well., Aso's study is an intriguing, and refreshingly straightforward, examination of the shaping of the Japanese public.... This is a remarkably accessible text highlighting a set of ideas with implications and lessons that reach far beyond the case study's time and place and straight into the musings of museum studies today, complete with reproductions of historical photographs, documentation and other ephemera that add a welcome visual touchstone to Aso's detailed accounts., " Public Properties demonstrates that Japan's development of museums reflected its growth into a modern nation-state. Yet the book is more than a history of the museum in modern Japan. Noriko Aso offers a comprehensive account of how public and private institutions came together in the formation of national and imperial ideals, pointing out how museums in Japan's colonies were conceived to take advantage of local conditions while emphasizing the larger mission of empire." -Stefan Tanaka , author of New Times in Modern Japan, " Public Properties demonstrates that Japan's development of museums reflected its growth into a modern nation-state. Yet the book is more than a history of the museum in modern Japan. Noriko Aso offers a comprehensive account of how public and private institutions came together in the formation of national and imperial ideals, pointing out how museums in Japan's colonies were conceived to take advantage of local conditions while emphasizing the larger mission of empire." Stefan Tanaka , author of New Times in Modern Japan, " Public Properties will be an important book in Japanese history and intersecting fields including colonial studies, public culture, art history, and museum studies. Noriko Aso shows how integral a modern museum culture was to the formation of an 'imperial public' in Japan during the late nineteenth century and early twentieth. She provides original perspectives on questions of collective identity and political culture during the imperial era and sheds new light on key issues in the field of modern Japanese history."-- Leslie Pincus , author of Authenticating Culture in Imperial Japan: Kuku Shuzo and the Rise of National Aesthetics, " Public Properties will be an important book in Japanese history and intersecting fields including colonial studies, public culture, art history, and museum studies. Noriko Aso shows how integral a modern museum culture was to the formation of an 'imperial public' in Japan during the late nineteenth century and early twentieth. She provides original perspectives on questions of collective identity and political culture during the imperial era and sheds new light on key issues in the field of modern Japanese history."-- Leslie Pincus , author of Authenticating Culture in Imperial Japan: Kuki Shuzo and the Rise of National Aesthetics, By skillfully juxtaposing her analysis of government and private exhibition spaces, the author offers bold and compelling explanations for how artistic objects were used to create new publics that helped form collective identification with Japan's imperial state in the early twentieth century. No reader will fail to be edified by this thoughtful and instructive study., "Public Properties demonstrates that Japan's development of museums reflected its growth into a modern nation-state. Yet the book is more than a history of the museum in modern Japan. Noriko Aso offers a comprehensive account of how public and private institutions came together in the formation of national and imperial ideals, pointing out how museums in Japan's colonies were conceived to take advantage of local conditions while emphasizing the larger mission of empire."-Stefan Tanaka, author of New Times in Modern Japan "Public Properties will be an important book in Japanese history and intersecting fields including colonial studies, public culture, art history, and museum studies. Noriko Aso shows how integral a modern museum culture was to the formation of an 'imperial public' in Japan during the late nineteenth century and early twentieth. She provides original perspectives on questions of collective identity and political culture during the imperial era and sheds new light on key issues in the field of modern Japanese history."--Leslie Pincus, author of Authenticating Culture in Imperial Japan: Kuku Shuzo and the Rise of National Aesthetics
Illustrated
Yes
Dewey Decimal
069.0952/09034
Table Of Content
List of Illustrations ix Acknowledgments xi Introduction 1 1. Stating the Public 13 2. Imperial Properties 63 3. Colonial Properties 95 4. The Private Publics of Ohara, Shibusawa, and Yanagi 127 5. Consuming Publics 169 Epilogue 203 Notes 223 Bibliography 279 Index 297
Synopsis
Public Properties is a historical account of how museums in Japan and its empire contributed to the reimagining of state and society during Japan's imperial era, from 1868 until 1945., In the late nineteenth century, Japan's new Meiji government established museums to showcase a national aesthetic heritage. Inspired by Western museums and expositions, these institutions were introduced by government officials hoping to spur industrialization and self-disciplined public behavior, and to cultivate an "imperial public" loyal to the emperor. Japan's network of museums expanded along with its colonies. By the mid-1930s, the Japanese museum system had established or absorbed institutions in Taiwan, Korea, Sakhalin, and Manchuria. Not surprising, colonial subjects' views of Japanese imperialism differed from those promulgated by the Japanese state. Meanwhile, in Japan, philanthropic and commercial museums were expanding, revising, and even questioning the state-sanctioned aesthetic canon. Public Properties describes how museums in Japan and its empire contributed to the reimagining of state and society during the imperial era, despite vigorous disagreements about what was to be displayed, how, and by whom it was to be seen.
LC Classification Number
AM77.A2A75 2013
ebay_catalog_id
4
Copyright Date
2013
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