Tetsuo Najita explores a powerful theme in the economic thought and practice of ordinary citizens in late Tokugawa and early modern Japan. He examines commoners writings on the virtues of commerce, the reconstruction of villages, and groups offering credit and loans, particularly the traditional cooperative, the ko, which citizens created to save one another in times of famine and fiscal emergency without turning to their government. The alternative genealogy of early Japanese capitalism that emerges is based on cooperative action, whose motive for profit was combined with a concern for social well-being. Najitas discussion centers on the relationship of economics, ethics, and the epistemological premise that nature must serve as the first principle of all knowledge, and he illuminates comparative issues of poverty, capitalism, and modernity.
Tetsuo Najita is the Robert S. Ingersoll Distinguished Service Professor emeritus in the Departments of History and East Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago. His many publications includeHara Kei in the Politics of Compromise, Japan: Intellectual Foundations of Modern Japanese Politics,andVisions of Virtue in Tokugawa Japan.
Preface
1. Other Visions of Virtue
2. Commonsense Knowledge
3. The K_ as Organizational Consciousness
4. Work as Ethical Practice
5. H_toku and Modernizing the Nation
6. The Mujin Company
Epilogue: A Fragmented Discourse
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Ordinary Economies in Japandirects our attention to a subordinate yet powerful theme in modern Japanese economic thought that appeared unobtrusively in the mid-Tokugawa period and found expression in the formation of voluntary, non-hierarchical associations of commoners who purposively organized their self-help activities apart from state authority. Tetsuo Najita's compelling analysis of k? is groundbreaking and exlc