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・ Yoshiharu Yamaguchi
・ Yoshihide
・ Yoshihide Fujiwara
・ Yoshihide Fukao
・ Yoshihide Fukutome
・ Yoshihide Hayashi
・ Yoshihide Kiryū
・ Yoshihide Muroya
・ Yoshihide Nagano
・ Yoshihide Nishikawa
・ Yoshihide Sasaki
・ Yoshihide Suga
・ Yoshihide Ueda
・ Yoshihiko
・ Yoshihiko Amano
Yoshihiko Amino
・ Yoshihiko Fukuda
・ Yoshihiko Funazaki
・ Yoshihiko Hosoda
・ Yoshihiko Ito (chemist)
・ Yoshihiko Itō
・ Yoshihiko Kanatsu
・ Yoshihiko Kazamaru
・ Yoshihiko Kikuchi
・ Yoshihiko Matsui
・ Yoshihiko Matsumoto
・ Yoshihiko Matsuoka
・ Yoshihiko Miyauchi
・ Yoshihiko Nikawadori
・ Yoshihiko Noda


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Yoshihiko Amino : ウィキペディア英語版
Yoshihiko Amino

was a Japanese Marxist historian and public intellectual, perhaps most singularly known for his novel examination of medieval Japanese history. Although little of the work by Amino has been published in the West, Japanese writers and historians of Japan regard Amino as one of the most important Japanese historians of the twentieth century.〔〔Sakurai, Eiji. "Foreword to 'Medieval Japanese Constructions of Peace and Liberty: ''Muen'', ''Kugai'', and ''Raku''". ''International Journal of Asian Studies'' 4 (1). 2007〕〔Souyri, Pierre F. "Yoshihiko Amino" ''Le Monde''. Mar. 4, 2004. ''LeMonde.fr''. Retrieved Mar. 30, 2009. http://www.lemonde.fr/cgi-bin/ACHATS/acheter.cgi?offre=ARCHIVES&type_item=ART_ARCH_30J&objet_id=842817&clef=ARC-TRK-NC_01 (French)〕
==Biography==
Born in Yamanashi Prefecture in 1928, Amino received a high school education in Tokyo.〔 Amino studied under the Marxist historian Ishimoda Shō ((日本語:石母田 正); 1912–1986) at the University of Tokyo, where he first became involved in both Marxist historiography and the student movement during the early postwar period.〔 Following graduation, Amino taught for several years at the high school level, beginning his career as a university professor at Nagoya University in 1956 as an assistant professor before taking up a post at Kanagawa University in 1980 as a professor of the university's Junior College and a Kanagawa Research Fellow, exchanging a more prestigious teaching position at a national university for the opportunity to devote more energy to research and publication. There, with his colleague, the anthropologist Miyata Noboru (宮田 登; 1936–2000), he ran an interdisciplinary seminar at the newly founded Institute for the Study of Japanese Folklore (日本常民文化研究所) established in 1982. Although Amino continued in his capacity as a writer until his death, he retired from both institutional teaching and research in 1998.
Amino began his career researching the lifestyles of out-of-the way villagers and marginalized non-urbanized Japanese. His scrupulous examination of primary sources enabled him to reconstruct the outlooks of a variety of non-agrarian peasant communities that shared little in common with the image of "the Japanese" constructed by scholarship and nationalist historians. He arrived at the conclusion that medieval Japan was neither a single culturally- and socially-integrated state, but rather a mosaic of quite distinct societies, some of which knew nothing, for example, about the Japanese emperor. From these beginnings he undertook, especially in the last three decades of his life, an extensive rewriting of the common orthodoxies about Japanese history and Japanese society, which had exercised a powerful hegemony over academics and their national audience since the Meiji period. In this sense, he became one of the great academic deconstructors of the premises and mythology of the nihonjinron.
He died of lung cancer on February 27, 2004, aged 76.〔

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