Uneven Moments

Uneven Moments

Reflections on Japan's Modern History

Few scholars have done more than Harry Harootunian to shape the study of modern Japan. Incorporating Marxist critical perspectives on history and theoretically informed insights, his scholarship has been vitally important for the world of Asian studies. Uneven Moments presents a selection of Harootunian’s essays on Japan’s intellectual and cultural history from the late Tokugawa period to the present that span the many phases of his distinguished career and point to new directions for Japanese studies.

Uneven Moments begins with reflections on area studies as an academic field and how we go about studying a region. It then moves into discussions of key topics in modern Japanese history. Harootunian considers Japan’s fateful encounter with capitalist modernity and the implications of uneven development, examining the combinations of older practices with new demands that characterized the twentieth century. The book examines the making of modern Japan, the transformations of everyday life, and the collision between the production of forms of cultural expression and new political possibilities. Finally, Harootunian analyzes Japanese political identity and its forms of reckoning with the past. Exploring the shifting relationship among culture, the making of meaning, and politics in rich reflections on Marxism and critical theory, Uneven Moments presents Harootunian’s intellectual trajectory and in so doing offers a unique assessment of Japanese history.
  • Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Uneven Moments from Japan’s Modern History
  • Part I. Imminent Criticism and Academic Discourse: Area Studies
    • 1. Tracking the Dinosaur: Area Studies in a Time of “Globalism”
    • 2. “Memories of Underdevelopment” After Area Studies
  • Part II. Cultural Form and Political Withdrawal: Tokugawa Japan
    • 3. Cultural Politics in Tokugawa Japan
    • 4. Late Tokugawa Culture and Thought
  • Part III. Pathways to Modernity’s Present and the Enduring Everyday
    • 5. Shadowing History: National Narratives and the Persistence of the Everyday
    • 6. Overcome by Modernity: Fantasizing Everyday Life and the Discourse on the Social in Interwar Japan
    • 7. Time, Everydayness, and the Specter of Fascism: Tosaka Jun and Philosophy’s New Vocation
    • 8. Allegorizing History: Marxism, Hani Gorō, and the Demands of the Present
    • 9. Philosophy and Answerability: The Kyoto School and the Epiphanic Moment of World History
    • 10. Reflections from Fukushima: History, Memory, and the Crisis of Contemporaneity
  • Part IV. Ideological Formation: Colluding with the Past'
    • 11. Visible Discourses/Invisible Ideologies
    • 12. The Presence of Archaism/The Persistence of Fascism
  • Previously Published Materials
  • Index

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