Limit search to available items
168 results found. Sorted by relevance | date | title .
Book Cover
E-book

Title The Tokugawa world / edited by Gary P. Leupp and De-min Tao
Published Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2022
©2022

Copies

Description 1 online resource (xxvi, 1172 pages) : illustrations, maps
Series Routledge worlds
Routledge worlds.
Contents Introduction / By Gary P. Leupp, De-min Tao -- Part I National reunification, 1563-1603 -- Chapter One: The three unifiers of the state (tenka): Nobunaga (1534-82), Hideyoshi (1536-98), and Ieyasu (1543-1616) / By Fujita Tatsuo -- Chapter Two: Japan's invasions of Korea in 1592-98 and the Hideyoshi regime / By Nam-Lin Hur -- Chapter Three: The life and afterlife of Tokugawa Ieyasu (1543-1616) / By Morgan Pitelka -- Part II: The physical landscape -- Chapter Four: Water management in Tokugawa Japan / By Murata Michihito -- Chapter Five: The King Yu legend and flood control in Tokugawa Japan / By Wang Min -- Chapter Six: Earthquakes in historical context / By Gregory Smits -- Chapter Seven: The center of the shogun's realm Building Nihonbashi * / By Timon Screech -- Part III: Tokugawa society -- Chapter Eight: The samurai in Tokugawa Japan / By Constantine Vaporis -- Chapter Nine: Villages and farmers in the Tokugawa period / By Watanabe Takashi -- Chapter Ten: Popular movements in the Edo period Peasants, peasant uprisings, and the development of lawful petitions / By Taniyama Masamichi -- Chapter Eleven: Coastal whaling and its impact on early modern Japan / By Jakobina Arch -- chapter Chapter Twelve: Outcastes and their social roles in Tokugawa Japan / By Maren Ehlers -- Part IV: Family, gender, sexuality, and reproduction -- Chapter Thirteen: Women in cities and towns / By Amy Stanley -- Chapter Fourteen: Childhood in Tokugawa Japan / By Kristin Williams -- Chapter Fifteen: Growing small bodies at the point of skin Young children's bodies and health in sacred skinscape / By William Lindsey -- Part V: Tokugawa economy -- Chapter Sixteen: Food fights, but it's always for fun in early modern Japan / By Eric Rath -- Chapter Seventeen: The silk weavers of Nishijin Wage-laborers in the Tokugawa world / By Gary P. Leupp -- Chapter Eighteen: The marketing of urban human waste and urban-fringe agriculture around the Tokugawa cities / By Tajima Kayo -- Part VI: Tokugawa Japan in the world -- Chapter Nineteen: Japan and the world in Tokugawa maps / By Kären Wigen -- Chapter Twenty: Nihonmachi in Southeast Asia in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries / By Travis Seifman -- Chapter Twenty-one: Rethinking Ezo-chi, the Ainu, and Tokugawa Japan in a global perspective / By Noémi Godefroy -- Chapter Twenty-two: The opening of the Tokugawa world and Japan's foreign relations The visits of Korean embassies to Japan / By Nakao Hiroshi -- Chapter Twenty-three: Early modern Ryukyu between China and Japan / By Watanabe Miki -- Chapter Twenty-four: Dutch East India company relations with Tokugawa Japan / By Adam Clulow -- Chapter Twenty-five: The presence of black people in Japan during the Edo period / By Fujita Midori -- Chapter Twenty-six: Seventeenth-century Chinese émigrés and Sino-Japanese cultural exchanges / By Shing-Ching Shyu -- Chapter Twenty-seven: Selective Sakoku? Tantalizing hints of the Japanese in China after the Tokugawa maritime prohibition / By Xing Hang -- Chapter Twenty-eight: Tokugawa Japan and the rise of modern racial thought in the West / By Rotem Kowner -- Part VII: The performing arts and sport -- Chapter Twenty-nine: The musical world of Tokugawa Japan / By Alison Tokita -- Chapter Thirty: Visual disability and musical culture in Edo-period Japan / By Gerald Groemer -- Chapter Thirty-one: Tominaga Nakamoto (1715-46) and Gagaku (court music) / By Intō Kazuhiro -- Chapter Thirty-Two: Staging senseless violence Early jōruri puppet theater and the culture of performance / By Keller Kimbrough -- Chapter Thirty-Three: Rural kabuki and the imagination of Japanese identity in the late Tokugawa Period / By William Fleming -- Chapter Thirty-four: Sumo wrestling in the Tokugawa period / By Lee Thompson, Nitta Ichirō -- Part VIII: Art and literature -- Chapter Thirty-five: Shunga in Tokugawa society and culture / By Andrew Gerstle -- Chapter Thirty-six: Uses of shunga and ukiyo-e in the Tokugawa period / By Hayakawa Monta -- Chapter Thirty-seven: The two paths of love in the fiction of Ihara Saikaku / By David Gundry -- Chapter Thirty-eight: Furuta Oribe Controversial daimyo tea-master / By Kaminishi Ikumi -- Chapter Thirty-nine: Grass booklets and the roots of manga Comic books in the Tokugawa period / By Glynne Walley -- Chapter Forty: An iconology of the Orchid Pavilion Gathering Image, text, and communities in Tokugawa-era Japan / By Kazuko Kameda-Madar -- Chapter Forty-one: The folk worldview of Chronicles of the Eight Dog Heroes of the Satomi Clan of Nansō / By Inoue Atsushi -- Chapter Forty-two: Okakura Kakuzō and the Osaka Painting Schools of the Tokugawa era / By Nakatani Nobuo -- Chapter Forty-three: The rise and fall and spring of haiku / By Adam L. Kern -- Part IX: Religion and thought -- Chapter Forty-four: Christians, Christianity, and Kakure Kirishitan in Japan (1549-1868) / By Jan Leuchtenberger -- Chapter Forty-five: Pilgrimage in Tokugawa Japan / By Barbara Ambros / Chapter Forty-six: Structuring the canon Exceptionalism and Kokugaku / By Mark McNally -- Chapter Forty-seven: The image of Susanoo in Hirata Atsutane's Koshiden / By Tajiri Yūichirō -- Chapter Forty-eight: Itō Jinsai and the origins of Classical Learning (Kogaku) / By Tsuchida Kenjirō -- chapter Chapter Forty-nine: Mapping intellectual history / By Kojima Yasunori -- Chapter Fifty: Emperor-centrism and the historiography of the Mito School By Kojima Tsuyoshi -- Chapter fifty-one: Military thought in the Tokugawa world / By Maeda Tsutomu -- Chapter Fifty-two: Confucian views of life and death / By Takahashi Fumihiro -- Part X: Education and Science -- Chapter Fifty-three: Tokugawa popular education / By Brian Platt -- Chapter Fifty-four: The Greater Learning for Women and women's moral education in Tokugawa Japan / By Yabuta Yutaka -- Chapter Fifty-five: "Reading" of the Chinese classics and the history of thought in the Edo period / By Nakamura Shunsaku -- Chapter Fifty-six: Health, disease, and epidemics in late Tokugawa Japan / By William Johnston -- Chapter Fifty-seven: Doctors and herbal medicine in Tokugawa Japan / By Machi Senjurō -- Chapter Fifty-eight: The history of natural history in Tokugawa Japan / By Federico Marcon -- Chapter Fifty-nine: Attitudes toward celestial events in Tokugawa Japan / By Sugi Takeshi -- Part X: Epilogue -- Chapter Sixty: From feudalism to meritocracy? Growing demand for competent and efficient government in the late Tokugawa period / By Matsuda Kōichirō -- Chapter Sixty-one: Shōin and changing worldviews in the late Tokugawa period / By Kirihara Kenshin -- Chapter Sixty-two: The Shinsengumi Shadows and light in the last days of the Tokugawa shogunate / By Kimura Sachihiko -- Chapter Sixty-three: Katsu Kaishū and Yokoi Shōnan Late Tokugawa imaginings of a more democratic Japan * / By M. William Steele -- Chapter Sixty-four: Confucian education in the formative years of the Meiji leaders and its modern implications 1 / By De-min Ta
Summary With over 60 contributions, The Tokugawa World presents the latest scholarship on early modern Japan from an international team of specialists in a volume that is unmatched in its breadth and scope. In its early modern period, under the Tokugawa shoguns, Japan was a world apart. For over two centuries the shogun's subjects were forbidden to travel abroad and few outsiders were admitted. Yet in this period, Japan evolved as a nascent capitalist society that could rapidly adjust to its incorporation into the world system after its forced "opening" in the 1850s. The Tokugawa World demonstrates how Japan's early modern society took shape and evolved: a world of low and high cultures, comic books and Confucian academies, soba restaurants and imperial music recitals, rigid enforcement of social hierarchy yet also ongoing resistance to class oppression. A world of outcasts, puppeteers, herbal doctors, samurai officials, businesswomen, scientists, scholars, blind lutenists, peasant rebels, tea-masters, sumo wrestlers, and wage workers. Covering a variety of features of the Tokugawa world including the physical landscape, economy, art and literature, religion and thought, and education and science, this volume is essential reading for all students and scholars of early modern Japan
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Gary P. Leupp is Professor of History, Tufts University, author of Servants, Shophands and Laborers in the Cities of Tokugawa Japan (1989); Male Colors: The Construction of Homosexuality in Tokugawa Japan (1993); Interracial Intimacy: Japanese Women and Western Men, 1543-1900 (2001), and other works on class, gender, and ethnicity in Japanese history. De-min Tao is Professor Emeritus at Kansai University, Japan, author of A Study of the Kaitokudō Neo-Confucianism (J. 1994); Yoshida Shōin and Commodore Perry: A Multilingual Study of the 1854 Shimoda Incident (2020); and An Alternative Image of Naitō Konan: 20 Years of Research about the Naitō Collection at Kansai University Library (J. 2021)
Online resource; title from PDF title page (Taylor & Francis Group platform, viewed January 14, 2022)
Subject HISTORY -- Asia -- Japan.
HISTORY -- Modern -- 17th Century.
HISTORY -- Modern -- 18th Century.
Manners and customs
Tokugawa period, Japan, 1600-1868
SUBJECT Japan -- History -- Tokugawa period, 1600-1868. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85069473
Japan -- Social life and customs -- 1600-1868. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85069582
Subject Japan
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Leupp, Gary P., editor.
Tao, Demin, 1951- editor.
ISBN 1000427331
9781000427332
9781003198888
1003198880
1000427412
9781000427417