L’influence des cultures du continent asiatique sur l’archipel japonais

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14 décembre 2016

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OpenEdition Books

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OpenEdition

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https://www.openedition.org/12554 , info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess




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Linda Gilaizeau, « L’influence des cultures du continent asiatique sur l’archipel japonais », Publications de la Sorbonne, ID : 10.4000/books.psorbonne.6127


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Is the birth of the first centralized Japanese state the result of a native development, of the fusion of two different cultures or the simple adoption of foreign innovations? During all Protohistory, the Japanese archipelago is in constant relations with more advanced continental societies (Chinese) or societies of a similar complexity (Korean). Our aim is to understand if these exchanges favoured the rising of a ruling elite, identified by monumental graves, the kofun. Outside any modern nationalist consideration, we are trying to identify what can be considered as “Japanese” or “imported” technical or cultural element and these elements’ means of transmission. We intend to determine the dynamics of cultural, social and political transformation which led to the unification of Japan. Neglected in France, the Japanese Protohistory possesses a quaint chronological sequence. It offers here a new example of socio-cultural development inside an elaborated regional system.

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