Q1: Why did the Chinese react slowly?
Ans: They found difficulties in redefining their traditions to cope with the modem world, in rebuilding its national strength, and in winning freedom from British and Japanese rule.
Q2: When did a more democratic political system begin in Japan?
Ans: It was just after the US occupation which enabled Japan to emerge as a major economic power by the decade of 1970.
Q3: Why did the Meiji Government in Japan appoint a bureau in 1869?
Ans: It was appointed for the collection of records and to write a victor version of the Meiji Restoration.
Q4: What kind of regional diversity in Chinese food is seen?
Ans: Chinese food is in variety. Generally, there are four types / of dishes:-
Q5: Who held the position of Shogun in Japan and when?
Ans: The members of the Tokugawa family held the position of Shogun (regent) from 1603 to 1867 in Japan.
Q6: What was the achievement of Japan by the mid-seventeenth century?
Ans: Japan had grown in the three most populated and vast cities viz. Edo (Presently Tokyo), Osaka, and Kyoto.
Q7: What does the Tale of Genji reveal?
Ans: It reveals that Japanese culture was more ancient or older than that of Chinese. It was a fictionalized diary written by Murasaki Shikibu.
Q8: Why would the USA have seen Japan as a major market?
Ans: It was because Japan fell on the route to China.
Q9: Do you think modernization can be brought in personality, in ways of thinking, in appearance, in behavioral pattern, etc. merely by direct copying siblings, great men, etc? Discuss.
Ans: When we see, children taught by a single teacher, appear with different portfolios in their youth, any society maker should not think that his speech/action and temperament is equally accepted by all the populace amid which he is heard, behaved, and faced. Modernization in Western countries should be first studied from electronic and print media and observed with its common reflection on the masses and the thorough cycle of study not less than a decade and situations at one’s home, village, town, and a country worth reminiscence or worth recollection. An introspection and review comparative are then made before framing generalization and riding at the stair of conclusion. “Copying is fatal and suicidal” one should keep in mind or be ready to repent after three or four decades, as it is an inevitable after-effects/stroke.
Q10: Do you think old traditions and habits were the main deterrents to the modernization of China? Discuss.
Ans: Old Traditions and Habits:
Confucianism is no doubt a great stimulus but not understood in its implied meaning. It was taken as a synonym to cowardice, loathsome and a device to intrigue e.g.. Two parties conflict with each other. Hence, the above were the traditions that could not modernize China.
Q11: Why did the Guomindang fail in China?
Ans: Its base was confined to the urban population and never raised the issues pertaining to the common masses.
Q12: Give a brief account of Fukuzawa Yukichi?
Ans: He was one of the highest intelligent members of the Meiji family. He is born in a poor Samurai family. He acquired higher education in Dutch, western sciences, and English in Nagasaki and Osaka. He was a translator for the first Japanese embassy to the USA. He had composed a hook on The Encouragement to Learning (Gakumon no Susume) not in classical but in the spoken style that became extremely popular. He established a school promoted today as Keio University. He was a member of the society Meirokusha, engaged in the promotion of Western learning. He had advocated not just modem factories and institutes but the cultural essence of the West, the spirit of colonization. His doctrine was thateaven did not create men above men nor set men below men.
Q13: How does a sense of discrimination unite people?
Ans: As development and destruction run simultaneously, equality and discrimination are like two aspects of the same coin. For instance, Buck Clayton in this theme has been told a black American but a wealthy man. By chance, he had to meet insults and humiliations in the hands of White Americans in Shanghai. The apology was, however, asked by them in his matter but he since that day, became a friend to all Chinese and protested against that discrimination viz. he was united with the entire community of black people.
Discrimination is that pleasing thing that receives a wider response from the person who is discriminated against. On such occasions, boundaries of territories, and differences due to Social and Economic status are forgotten and the man discriminated against intakes the issue in-depth and joins himself with the community, so discriminated.
Q14: Describe the theme “Paths to modernization” taking two countries i.e. China and Japan, striving for modernization. Mention „ the political thoughts, society and law and orders, and essence of modernization adopted by Japan a smaller country than China.
Ans: The theme "Paths to Modernization" is a fascinating exploration of how different countries, in this case, China and Japan, pursued modernization in the 19th and 20th centuries. While both nations were influenced by the West and sought to modernize their societies, they took distinct approaches. Here's a comparison of their political thoughts, society, law and order, and the essence of modernization:
Japan:
China:
In summary, Japan's path to modernization was characterized by a focused and deliberate effort to adopt Western institutions, technologies, and ideologies. The Meiji Restoration laid the foundation for Japan's transformation into a modern, industrialized nation. In contrast, China's modernization efforts were marked by internal divisions, external pressures, and a struggle to reconcile traditional Chinese values with Western ideas. These differences in approach and circumstances had a profound impact on the modernization trajectories of these two East Asian nations. Japan emerged as a highly developed and influential nation, while China faced a longer and more complex journey toward modernity.
Q15: Would you agree with Nishitani’s definition of “Modem”?
Ans: The term “Modern” as defined by Nishitani, a philosopher was composed of crystal of the Renaissance, the Protestant Reformation, and the rise of natural sciences all western thought. In my opinion, that scholar was all true. It was actually, an exercise to integrate science and religion. These two things are as essential and inevitable as the relation of the body (a crystal made of matters i.e. solid, liquid, and gas) and the soul (emotions, instincts, temperament, and discretion). Science is boon and curses simultaneously depending on its application and, that is possible only when the individual is abreast with biology, botany, environment, the ethics, interrelation of human beings with the environment, etc. On one side, science provides the populace with comforts and ease, while on the other, it spreads devastation; if applied in the manufacture of hydrogen, nuclear bombs. The consequence of the renaissance, the protestant reformations, and the contribution of science to them were, therefore, worth noticing and comparing with the circumstances that existed in Japan.
Q16: Contrast the encounter of the Japanese and the Aztecs with the Europeans.
Ans: The encounters of the Japanese and the Aztecs with Europeans were distinct and shaped by unique circumstances, geography, and timing. Here's a contrast between these two encounters:
Geography and Timing:
Nature of Encounter:
Impact on Native Societies:
Cultural and Religious Aspects:
Long-Term Consequences:
In summary, the encounters of the Japanese and the Aztecs with Europeans were shaped by distinct historical contexts, resulting in different outcomes and long-term consequences. While Japan's encounter led to some cultural and technological exchange, the Aztecs faced conquest, destruction, and colonization by the Spanish. These encounters highlight the complexity and diversity of interactions between indigenous societies and European powers during the Age of Exploration and colonization.
Q17: Analyze the path chosen by China for her modernization?
Ans: Existing situations and circumstances-
Result: Political and Social order failed to keep the masses at ease and with comforts. Situations had taken a toll of several thousand lives in the course of internal (civil) unrest and invasion by foreign powers. Epidemics had further aggravated the pains of the public. Owing to these circumstances, China could see the light of progress later than Japan.
Inherent Causes:
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