ボイド ジェームズ パトリック Ⅲ
BOYD, James Patrick III
BOYD, James P. 所属 青山学院大学 国際政治経済学部 国際政治学科 職種 准教授 |
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言語種別 | 英語 |
発行・発表の年月 | 2012/09 |
形態種別 | その他 |
標題 | States of the Nations: Nationalism, Narratives and Normative Change in Postwar Japan |
執筆形態 | 単独 |
概要 | This dissertation evaluates claims that nationalism is rising in post-Cold War Japan by first noting the disconnect between existent social science conceptions of nationalism and those needed to examine how nationalism might change in contemporary, peaceful, wealthy, and stable democracies such as postwar Japan. This study defines nationalism as a discourse that constructs and reconstructs points of identification and differentiation that define both a political community (i.e. “nation”) and the form of its domain over a modern territorial state. It argues nationalism is best understood as reoccurring “nation-state narratives” that tell the story of how the nation’s putative qualities or past experiences define the present nature of its territorial state. Change in nationalism is evaluated through content and discourse analysis of five narratives expressing the relationship between the Japanese people and their state in a sample of elite discourse drawn from the period 1952-2007.
The analysis reveals that references to all five narratives peak in the immediate postwar period and again in the 1980s before declining to lows in the post-Cold War period, which also saw the highest level of contestation over these narratives in the nearly sixty years of the study. In particular, the narrative depicting Japan as an anti-militarist/pacifist nation-state as well as the narrative emphasizing Japan as an ethnically homogeneous nation-state proved the most contested during this period, while the narrative affirming Japan as a democratic nation-state went uncontested. Political struggles over reforming institutions associated with the narratives were found to be the major drivers behind these changes, although characteristics of the narratives, especially the specificity of their normative claims, also shaped this process. |