Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-p2v8j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-11T17:48:21.208Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Aspects of Mobility in Pre-Industrial Japanese Cities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Robert J. Smith
Affiliation:
Cornell University

Extract

A very great deal of our knowledge of urban life in Tokugawa Japan relates to the “happy society” of Genroku in the early 18th century, to the life of the theater and the gay quarters, and to the activities of the great merchant houses and the more extravagant and colorful of their heads. Extensive coverage is given theories of the state, administrative arrangements, and the discrepancies between the actual and theoretical positions of the classes of Tokugawa society. Ordinarily, mobility is treated in passing, partly because vertical social mobility is rightly presumed to have been a minor feature of that society until at least its closing period, and partly because the materials required are so difficult to unearth and so resistant to rigorous analysis. Bellah's observation that “…mobility was largely within classes rather than between them,” is apt, although Taeuber reminds us that “…movements of surplus youth from the rural areas to the cities were adjustments of population to resources and employment opportunies that ante-dated modern industrialization by some centuries.” Lampard completes the thought with respect to its implications for the transition to industrialism in his remark that “…old commercial-administrative centers [provide] ready markets, some tradition of urban life, and constant pressure to secure a livelihood from non-farming activity.”

Type
Social Mobility
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1963

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Bellah, Robert N., Tokugawa Religion: The Values of Pre-Industrial Japan (Glencoe, 1957), p. 25.Google Scholar

2 Taeuber, Irene B., The Population of Japan (Princeton, 1958), p. 27.Google Scholar

3 Lampard, Eric E., “The History of Cities in the Economically Advanced Areas”, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 3 (1955), 130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 Smith, Robert J., “Pre-industrial Urbanism in Japan: A Consideration of Multiple Traditions in a Feudal Society”, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 9 (1960), 241257.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5 Friedmann, John, “Cities in Social Transformation”, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 4 (1961), 86103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

6 Takashi, Nakano, “Shōnin no shakai” [“Merchants' Society”] in Fukutake Tadashi, ed., Nihon no shakai [Japanese Society] (Tokyo, 1952), p. 88.Google Scholar

7 Nakano, , “Shōnin no shakai”, pp. 79136Google Scholar; Sadao, Yokoyama, “Kinsei toshi shuraku no dōtaisei to shūdansei” [“Movement and Grouping in the Urban Community of the Late Modern Period”] in Gendai shakaigaku no shomondai [Problems of Modern Sociology] (Tokyo, 1949), pp. 523546.Google Scholar