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KRÄMER, HANS MARTIN (1) answer(s).
 
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ID:   193604


Anti-secularist pan-Asianist from Europe: Paul Richard in Japan, 1916–1920 / Krämer, Hans Martin   Journal Article
Krämer, Hans Martin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The modern Japanese nation-state that was established from 1868 onwards was marked by a strong tendency towards the separation of state and religion: religions were protected as a private matter, but the public sphere was resolutely kept free of them. This was mainly done so that competing religions would not get in the way of state-sanctioned emperor worship. The latter, although imbued with elements from Shinto, was carefully defined as non-religious, so that emperor worship could be prescribed without harm to the constitutionally guaranteed freedom of religion. This secularist approach to policing religions was broadly shared among Japanese elites—but it did not remain unopposed.
Key Words Secularism  Japan  India  Second World War  Pan-Asianism  State Shinto 
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