Mapping early modern Japan : space, place, and culture in the Tokugawa period (1603-1868)

Bibliographic Information

Mapping early modern Japan : space, place, and culture in the Tokugawa period (1603-1868)

Marcia Yonemoto

(Asia : local studies/global themes, 7)

University of California Press, c2003

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 211-226) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This elegant history considers a fascinating array of texts, cultural practices, and intellectual processes--including maps and mapmaking, poetry, travel writing, popular fiction, and encyclopedias--to chart the emergence of a new geographical consciousness in early modern Japan. Marcia Yonemoto's wide-ranging history of ideas traces changing conceptions and representations of space by looking at the roles played by writers, artists, commercial publishers, and the Shogunal government in helping to fashion a new awareness of space and place in this period. Her impressively researched study shows how spatial and geographical knowledge confined to elites in early Japan became more generalized, flexible, and widespread in the Tokugawa period. In the broadest sense, her book grasps the elusive processes through which people came to name, to know, and to interpret their worlds in narrative and visual forms.

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