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A Sense of Place: The Political Landscape in Late Medieval Japan
Harvard University Press, 2013 Cloth: 978-0-674-72673-4 Library of Congress Classification DS894.465.S73 2013 Dewey Decimal Classification 952.13023
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
A Sense of Place examines the vast Kanto region as a locus of cultural identity and an object of familial attachment during the political and military turmoil of the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries in Japan. Through analysis of memoirs, letters, chronicles, poetry, travelogues, lawsuits, land registers, and archeological reports, David Spafford explores the relationships of the eastern elites to the space they inhabited: he considers the region both as a whole, in its literary representations and political and administrative dimensions, and as an aggregation of discrete locales, where struggles over land rights played out alongside debates about the meaning of ties between families and their holdings. Spafford also provides the first historical account in English of medieval castle building and the castellan revolution of the late fifteenth century, which militarized the countryside and radically transformed the exercise of authority over territory. See other books on: Elite (Social sciences) | Group identity | Place | Place attachment | Sense See other titles from Harvard University Press |
Nearby on shelf for History of Asia / Japan / Local history and description:
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