Westernization and Japanese-ness in Jogaku-Zasshi:The Meaning of the Amalgam as Mimicry
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概要
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Jogaku-Zasshi, first published in 1885, played a leading role in constructing the model of modern Japanese women. The impact of the magazine was notable in introducing not only Christianity, but also the western lifestyle. Despite such discourse, it was also eager to insist on Japanese-ness, admiring the imperial family and claiming the importance of women to the nation. In this paper, the question is: what did the amalgam of westernization and Japanese-ness mean? Such westernization as enlightenment was 'mimicry' as Bhabha defined as concerns the editor seeing the woman 'as a subject of a difference that is almost the same, but not quite'. Moreover, westernization led to a greater awareness of the nation making it inevitable that even in such a westernized periodical women were burdened with the task of preserving Japanese values.
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