{"title":"“Industrious Revolution” Revisited: A Variety of Diligence Derived from a Long-Term Local History of Kuta in Kyô-Otagi, a Former County in Japan","authors":"S. Murayama, H. Nakamura","doi":"10.3390/HISTORIES1030014","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Jan de Vries revised Akira Hayami’s original theory of the “Industrious Revolution” to make the idea more applicable to early modern commercialization in Europe, showcasing the development of the rural proletariat and especially the consumer revolution and women’s emancipation on the way toward an “Industrial Revolution.” However, Japanese villages followed a different path from the Western trajectory of the “Industrious Revolution,” which is recognized as the first step to industrialization. This article will explore how a different form of “industriousness” developed in Japan, covering medieval, early modern, and modern times. It will first describe why the communal village system was established in Japan and how this unique institution, the self-reliance system of a village, affected commercialization and industrialization and was sustained until modern times. Then, the local history of Kuta Village in Kyô-Otagi, a former county located close to Kyoto, is considered over the long term, from medieval through modern times. Kuta was not directly affected by the siting of new industrial production bases and the changes brought to villages located nearer to Kyoto. A variety of diligent interactions with living spaces is introduced to demonstrate that the industriousness of local women was characterized by conscience-driven perseverance.","PeriodicalId":41517,"journal":{"name":"Architectural Histories","volume":"21 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Architectural Histories","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3390/HISTORIES1030014","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ARCHITECTURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Jan de Vries revised Akira Hayami’s original theory of the “Industrious Revolution” to make the idea more applicable to early modern commercialization in Europe, showcasing the development of the rural proletariat and especially the consumer revolution and women’s emancipation on the way toward an “Industrial Revolution.” However, Japanese villages followed a different path from the Western trajectory of the “Industrious Revolution,” which is recognized as the first step to industrialization. This article will explore how a different form of “industriousness” developed in Japan, covering medieval, early modern, and modern times. It will first describe why the communal village system was established in Japan and how this unique institution, the self-reliance system of a village, affected commercialization and industrialization and was sustained until modern times. Then, the local history of Kuta Village in Kyô-Otagi, a former county located close to Kyoto, is considered over the long term, from medieval through modern times. Kuta was not directly affected by the siting of new industrial production bases and the changes brought to villages located nearer to Kyoto. A variety of diligent interactions with living spaces is introduced to demonstrate that the industriousness of local women was characterized by conscience-driven perseverance.
Jan de Vries修改了早见明最初的“工业革命”理论,使其更适用于欧洲早期的现代商业化,展示了农村无产阶级特别是消费革命和妇女解放在通往“工业革命”的道路上的发展。然而,日本的乡村走上了一条与西方的“工业革命”不同的道路,这被认为是工业化的第一步。本文将探讨一种不同形式的“勤劳”是如何在日本发展起来的,涵盖了中世纪、近代早期和近代。它将首先描述为什么公社村制度在日本建立,以及这个独特的制度,一个村庄的自力更生制度,如何影响商业化和工业化,并持续到现代。然后,从中世纪到近代,对京都附近的原郡Kyô-Otagi库塔村的地方史进行了长期的考察。新工业生产基地的选址以及京都附近村庄的变化并未直接影响库塔。通过与生活空间的各种勤奋互动,展示了当地女性的勤劳以良心驱动的毅力为特征。