Relatives represented as adopted children were especially important in samurai society as an important keyword for understanding Japanese society. In the absence of a successor, it was not only used as a means of adopting close relatives such as younger brothers and nephews, but also as a means of expanding military power in the Middle Ages. Since the Meiji era, many Japanese believe that even if there was some historical development in the pre-modern era, it had nothing to do with Japan's modernization = Westernization genealogy. However, since the Meiji era, Japanese researchers have begun to recognize that there is a certain direction in Japanese culture. This recognition shows the process of samuraiization in Japanese life. It expanded and strengthened its influence through various forms of kinship as well as samurai society in the Middle Ages. More than 150 years after the end of samurai rule, there are still many things related to samurai in various parts of Japan. Therefore, in this paper, In order to investigate the development of adoptive system without regard to pure blood, we focus on the Edo period.
동북아시아문화학회 [The Association of North-east Asian Cultures]
설립연도
2000
분야
복합학>학제간연구
소개
동북아시아 문화의 다양성과 정체성을 연구 토론하고, 지역내 문화 교류의 다양한 모습을 연구하고 문화변동의 큰 틀을 집적함으로써 우리 민족 문화 및 상대 민족의 문화적 터전을 이해하여 문화공동체적 특성을 계발하고 상호 관련성의 강화를 유도하는 학술활동을 통해 동북아시아의 문화발전에 이바지함.