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State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868) Book

State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868)
State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868), Before the late 1960s, Japan historians characterized the Early Modern Japanese economy in waht are typical feudal terms. Considered backward and stagnant, it was argued that the economy eventually collapsed under the weight of its own internal limitation, State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868) has a rating of 3 stars
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State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868), Before the late 1960s, Japan historians characterized the Early Modern Japanese economy in waht are typical feudal terms. Considered backward and stagnant, it was argued that the economy eventually collapsed under the weight of its own internal limitation, State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868)
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  • State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868)
  • Written by author Grace Kwon
  • Published by Taylor & Francis, Inc., November 2002
  • Before the late 1960s, Japan historians characterized the Early Modern Japanese economy in waht are typical feudal terms. Considered backward and stagnant, it was argued that the economy eventually collapsed under the weight of its own internal limitation
  • Before the late 1960s, Japan historians characterized the Early Modern Japanese economy in waht are typical feudal terms. Considered backward and stagnant, it was argued that the economy eventually collapsed under the weight of its own internal limitation
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Tables
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Ch. 1The Market & Economic Historiography of Tokugawa Japan1
State Formation and the 17th & 18th Century Economy3
Economic Change and Tokugawa Demography8
Demise of the Medieval Property System16
Constitution of a New Property Structure18
Ch. 2The Early Village & its Transformation27
Core & Periphery: Variations in the Nature & Course of Development28
The Village: Polarization & the Era of Transition31
The Rural Social Order & the Power of Local Elites36
The Landlord Estate: Household & Unit of Production39
The First Phase of Change: Formation of a Small Peasant Society41
Making the Estate Productive44
Ch. 3Construction of Peasant Land Relations53
A Break with the Past54
The Land System & Peasant Tenure55
Land into Capital57
The Second Phase of Change: Land Pawning60
The Kyoho Reforms: A Crisis of Feudal Revenues62
Turning Peasants into Tenants66
Landlord & Landlordly Prerogatives68
Ch. 4Social Change & Commercialization in the Periphery75
Peasant & Landlord during the Era of Transformation78
The New Tokugawa Landlord80
Rent: The Changing Profile of Landlord Income83
Horigane: Tenancy in a Tokugawa Village84
Fukushima Prefecture: Early Landlords & Tenants86
Nishino & Momozono Village: Tenancy & By-employment89
Ch. 5An Alternative Trajectory of Development: The Kinai101
A Different Start: Villages in the Kinai102
A Course of its Own: Production Organization in the Kinai106
Epilogue113
Bibliography119
Index133


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State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868), Before the late 1960s, Japan historians characterized the Early Modern Japanese economy in waht are typical feudal terms. Considered backward and stagnant, it was argued that the economy eventually collapsed under the weight of its own internal limitation, State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868)

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State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868), Before the late 1960s, Japan historians characterized the Early Modern Japanese economy in waht are typical feudal terms. Considered backward and stagnant, it was argued that the economy eventually collapsed under the weight of its own internal limitation, State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868)

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State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868), Before the late 1960s, Japan historians characterized the Early Modern Japanese economy in waht are typical feudal terms. Considered backward and stagnant, it was argued that the economy eventually collapsed under the weight of its own internal limitation, State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868)

State Formation, Property Relations, and the Development of the Tokugawa Economy (1600-1868)

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