This paper presents a novel understanding of the peasant uprisings (hyakushō ikki) during Japan’s Tokugawa period (1603-1868) by examining their political nature. Hyakushō ikki were never anti-domain authority rebellions, as existing scholarship suggests, let alone revolutions. Rather, they were petitionary movements held to outline peasants’ demands concerning the policies of domain lords. That is, by being premised around these rulers’ legitimacy, hyakushō ikki were designed as policy protests and requests for change. This paper shows hyakushō ikki were also the political approach preferred by the rulers themselves. Officially recognised peasants—with their own harvesting lands (hon byakushō)—could participate in village administration matters, and many were involved in various village decision and management processes. In this manner, peasants routinely gained limited amounts of experience in politics by operating within the village system as a unit of rule. This substantial privilege enabled hyakushō ikki, through which peasants also placed themselves in the political world, albeit restrictedly. Rulers also achieved many of their political goals through levies, land taxes, and other fees by depending on village administrations. This environment inevitably helped peasants gain a sense of political awareness. Despite being officially prohibited from participating in institutional politics, peasants refused to accept any additional land taxes or cash payments that threatened their status as peasants. In this manner, they enforced the will of the people through hyakushō ikki, confirming and maintaining their status by protesting the policies of their rulers and requesting change. Therefore, this paper argues that hyakushō ikki were informal methods by which peasants participated in the political process (mainly the policy-making process in the bakufu and domains), by focusing on the political actions taken by peasants as well as the demands they presented to their rulers.
목차
I. Introduction II. Three types of peasant uprisings III. Peasants who acknowledged their rulers IV. The logic of their demands in the context of hyakusho ikki V. Hyakusho ikki as a method of political participation VI. Conclusion References 논문초록
키워드
정치잠여농민농민봉기청원운동도쿠가와 시대political participationpeasantspeasant uprisings (hyakushō ikki)petitionary movementsTokugawa 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.