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What did the Meiji reformers want to retain, despite their quest for modernization?

User Nikhil N
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I believe they wanted to maintain Japanese tradition, even though they were following in the footsteps to western modernization.

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User Andreas Noack
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Answer:

Traditional values.

Step-by-step explanation:

The Meiji Restoration, which took place in 1868, was the process of overthrowing the shogunate and restoring power to the Japanese imperial family. This process resulted in the development and economic modernization of Japan from the late nineteenth century, transforming the nation into a regional power.

An important point of the meiji era was the reformulation of education, aimed at ensuring integration with the new government for the new generations and aimed at maintaining traditional Japanese values. Thus, teaching was used as a tool to transmit nationalist principles and to implement the cult of the Emperor's personality, which became known as State Shinto. The Emperor was seen as the incarnation of the goddess Amaterasu, goddess of the Sun of Shinto, a traditional Japanese religion.

User Herr K
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