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  1. Masao Maruyama (scholar) Masao Maruyama (丸山 眞男, Maruyama Masao, 22 March 1914 – 15 August 1996) was a leading Japanese political scientist and political theorist. His expertise lay in the history of Japanese political thought, to which he made major contributions.

  2. pp. 176-190; 'Maruyama Masao ni okeru Fukuzawa-Kan no Tenkai '(Maruyama Masao's Changing Views of Fukuzawa) in Fukuzawa Yukichi Nenkan (Annals of the Fukuzawa Yukichi Society) 29: 133-148 (2002); and Shisoshika Maruyama Masao Ron (On Maruyama Masao as Intellectual Historian), edited with Osumi Kazuo, Tokyo: Perikan-sha (2002). He can be reached ...

  3. Maruyama Masao (1914-1996) was a Japanese intellectual historian, perhaps best known for the quote mentioned above. It is from the afterword of the revised edition of his seminal Thought and Behaviour in Modern Japanese Politics from 1964 (the English edition was published in 1969). Within its opening essay, first published in 1946, he ...

  4. Apr 1, 2008 · Contextualising Maruyama in this fashion requires Karube to weave together text, context and biography in an original manner. Karube first paints the scene, then locates Maruyama as a person and as a scholar, adding Maruyama's own voice to consolidate the contemporary analytical focus. It is an extremely effective technique.

    • Rikki Kersten
    • 2008
  5. thing of a rarity.'. Translation and Japanese Modernity (Hon'yaku to Nihon no kindai, 1998)- the transcription of an extended dialogue between Maruyama Masao (1914-96) and Katõ Shūichi (1919-2008)- is a valuable exception. Maruyama, a leading postwar. political theorist and historian, and Katõ, a prominent literary critic and author, bring the.

  6. Feb 15, 2007 · Maruyama Masao, historian of Japanese political thought and political scientist, was the son of the prominent political journalist Maruyama Kanji, who worked for the Ôsaka Asahi and Ôsaka Mainichi newspapers. After graduating from the First Higher School in Tokyo in 1934 he studied the history of western political thought at the Law Faculty of Tokyo Imperial University.

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  8. The Maruyama Lectures are named in honor of the late Maruyama Masao (1914-96), historian of East Asian political thought and one of the most influential political thinkers in twentieth-century Japan. Sponsored by the Center for Japanese Studies, the series brings to the university important scholars and thinkers who will offer reflections on ...