植民地学
投稿者: qq_missile2 投稿日時: 2010/08/12 14:23 投稿番号: [173086 / 230347]
>新渡戸の植民地、植民地政策、植民地学への関わり
「植民地学=悪」の構図なのか?
新渡戸稲造が「どのような」関わりをしていたかという「本質」が問題なんだろ?
早いとこ、下の英文から「日本語版では隠蔽されてる、これが本質」ってもんを示してくれよ。
Meiji bureaucrat & educator
In 1901, Nitobe was appointed technical advisor to the Japanese colonial government in Taiwan, where he headed the Sugar Bureau.
Nitobe was appointed a full professor of law at the Kyoto Imperial University in 1904 and lectured on colonial studies. He became the Headmaster of the First Higher School (then the preparatory division for the Tokyo Imperial University) in 1906 and continued this position until he accepted the full-time professorship at the Law Faculty of Tokyo Imperial University in 1913. He taught agricultural economics and colonial policy and emphasized humanitarian aspect of colonial administration、and was cross-appointed the founding president of Tokyo Woman's Christian University (Tokyo Joshi Dai). His students at Tokyo Imperial University included Tadao Yanaihara, Shigeru Nanbara, Yasaka Takagi, and Tamon Maeda. (Yanaihara later continued Nitobe's chair in colonial studies at Tokyo University; but Yanaihara's pacifist views and emphasis on indigenous self-determination, which he partly inherited from Nitobe, came into a full conflict with Japan's wartime government during the World War II, resulted in barring him from teaching until after the war).
Nitobe and Hamilton Wright Mabie in 1911 were the first exchange professors between Japan and the United States under the auspices of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
After World War I, Nitobe joined other international and reform minded Japanese in organizing the Japan Council of the Institute of Pacific Relations.
「植民地学=悪」の構図なのか?
新渡戸稲造が「どのような」関わりをしていたかという「本質」が問題なんだろ?
早いとこ、下の英文から「日本語版では隠蔽されてる、これが本質」ってもんを示してくれよ。
Meiji bureaucrat & educator
In 1901, Nitobe was appointed technical advisor to the Japanese colonial government in Taiwan, where he headed the Sugar Bureau.
Nitobe was appointed a full professor of law at the Kyoto Imperial University in 1904 and lectured on colonial studies. He became the Headmaster of the First Higher School (then the preparatory division for the Tokyo Imperial University) in 1906 and continued this position until he accepted the full-time professorship at the Law Faculty of Tokyo Imperial University in 1913. He taught agricultural economics and colonial policy and emphasized humanitarian aspect of colonial administration、and was cross-appointed the founding president of Tokyo Woman's Christian University (Tokyo Joshi Dai). His students at Tokyo Imperial University included Tadao Yanaihara, Shigeru Nanbara, Yasaka Takagi, and Tamon Maeda. (Yanaihara later continued Nitobe's chair in colonial studies at Tokyo University; but Yanaihara's pacifist views and emphasis on indigenous self-determination, which he partly inherited from Nitobe, came into a full conflict with Japan's wartime government during the World War II, resulted in barring him from teaching until after the war).
Nitobe and Hamilton Wright Mabie in 1911 were the first exchange professors between Japan and the United States under the auspices of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
After World War I, Nitobe joined other international and reform minded Japanese in organizing the Japan Council of the Institute of Pacific Relations.
これは メッセージ 173084 (i_am_not_ill さん)への返信です.
固定リンク:https://yarchive.emmanuelc.dix.asia/1143582/ffckdca4h4z9qa4n5doc0a4n9adbel_1/173086.html