The Double Movement of the Landlord Class in Prewar Japan

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Double Movement of the Landlord Class in Prewar Japan
Abstract
The role of the landlord class in Japan's prewar economic and political development has been widely debated. Moving beyond conflicting arguments of landlords as semifeudal exploiters or as the linchpins of rural market development, more recent research has emphasized the nonmarket institutions, often inherited from the Tokugawa era, in which the contractual relations between landlords and tenants were embedded. However, this research has overemphasized the continuity of the rural economy. Rather than a smooth development, the historical trajectory of rural economic growth followed the "double movement" of capitalist development identified by the historian and economic anthropologist Karl Polanyi.
Publication
Journal of Japanese Studies
Volume
44
Issue
1
Pages
25-54
Date
Winter 2018
Journal Abbr
Journal of Japanese Studies
Language
English
ISSN
00956848
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Cohen, Mark. 2018. “The Double Movement of the Landlord Class in Prewar Japan.” Journal of Japanese Studies 44 (1): 25–54. DOI: 10.1353/jjs.2018.0001.
Publication year
Keywords
  • capitalism
  • double movement
  • history
  • Japan
  • landlord-tenant relations
  • Tokugawa Period, Japan, 1600-1868

Comments and observations

Be the first to comment!
Please email us your comments, and we will gladly review your submission.