Japan's Castles

£38.00

Japan's Castles

Citadels of Modernity in War and Peace

Architecture: castles and fortifications History of architecture Literature: history and criticism Peace studies and conflict resolution General and world history Asian history General and world history History Military history Archaeology Politics and government

Authors: Oleg Benesch, Ran Zwigenberg

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Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 2nd May 2019

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 44 Mb

ISBN: 9781108615334


Heritage Politics in Japan

An innovative examination of heritage politics in Japan, showing how castles have been used to re-invent and recapture competing versions of the pre-imperial past and project possibilities for Japan's future. Oleg Benesch and Ran Zwigenberg argue that Japan's modern transformations can be traced through its castles.

They examine how castle preservation and reconstruction campaigns served as symbolic ways to assert particular views of the past and were crucial in the making of an idealized premodern history. Castles have been used to craft identities, to create and erase memories, and to symbolically join tradition and modernity.

Until 1945, they served as physical and symbolic links between the modern military and the nation's premodern martial heritage. After 1945, castles were cleansed of military elements and transformed into public cultural spaces that celebrated both modernity and the pre-imperial past. What were once signs of military power have become symbols of Japan's idealized peaceful past.

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