1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910797145403321

Titolo

E.H. Norman : his life and scholarship / / edited by Roger W. Bowen

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Toronto, [Ontario] ; ; Buffalo, [New York] ; ; London, [England] : , : University of Toronto Press, , 1984

©1984

ISBN

1-4426-5073-7

1-4426-3235-6

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (225 p.)

Collana

Heritage

Altri autori (Persone)

NormanE. Herbert <1909-1957.>

Disciplina

971.063/092/4

Soggetti

Japanologists - Canada - Biography

Diplomats - Canada

Conference papers and proceedings.

Biographies.

Electronic books.

Japan Study and teaching (Higher) Congresses

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

"Selected writings of E.H. Norman": pages [201]-202

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- Biographical Sketch -- Herb Norman: The Perspective of a Lifelong Friend -- E.H. Norman and Japan -- Herbert Norman's Cambridge -- Cold War, McCarthyism, and Murder by Slander: E.H. Norman's Death in Perspective -- On Remembering Herbert Norman -- An Affection for the Lesser Names: An Appreciation of E. Herbert Norman -- Some Reflections on E.H. Norman: A Historian in the English Tradition -- E.H. Norman and the New Stage in Western Studies of Japan -- E.H. Norman on Modern Japan: Towards a Constructive Assessment -- The Appreciation of Norman's Historiography -- People under Feudalism -- Persuasion or Force: The Problem of Free Speech in Modern Society -- On the Modesty of Clio -- The Place of East Asian Studies in a Modern University -- Irony or Tragedy? -- Selected Writings of E.H. Norman -- Contributors -- Index

Sommario/riassunto

The ashes of Herbert Norman now lie in the British cemetery at Rome, near those of Shelley and Keats. His distinguished life and tragic death, in April 1957, are recalled and examined in this book by scholars and



diplomats from four countries—the United States, Japan, Canada, and Britain.Born in rural Japan the son of a Canadian missionary, Herbert Norman studied at the University of Toronto and went in 1933 to Cambridge University on a scholarship. There, in that intellectual hothouse where it seemed one had to choose politically between communism and fascism as the future of the West, he joined the Communist party—a move that became a crime later in the fixed and ‘sightless’ (as the editor describes them) eyes of his American accusers.According to Edwin Reischauer, later the US ambassador to Japan, ‘his harassment by the American government was unforgiveable.’ His suicide in Cairo, while Canadian ambassador to Nasser’s Egypt during and after the delicate times of the Suez Crisis and the establishment of the UN peace-keeping force, raised broader questions for Lester Pearson—‘the right, to say nothing of the propriety, of a foreign government to intervene’ in Canadian affairs.Norman was also a renowned historian of Japan. His Japan’s Emergence as a Modern State has been called a classic, and between 1946 and 1950, as head of the Canadian Liaison Mission in Tokyo, he was a close and friendly adviser to General Douglas MacArthur in his efforts to reconstitute that country. Both this work and his writings on Japan were sympathetic to human freedoms and democracy, and they too became controversial as sides congealed in the Cold War. Five papers in this book assess Norman’s scholarly work in the historiography of Japan.Four lecture papers by Norman (three previously unpublished) are included which show his change from ‘a doctrinaire Marxist to a Jeffersonian Liberal,’ a change historians can accept as fact whereas intelligence agencies could not and remade Norman into a communist. He was not a spy, the editor concludes, and should be remembered as the hero of a modern tragedy.