
Title:
Finding Japan : early Canadian encounters with Asia
Author:
Publication Date:
2012
Publication Information:
Vancouver : Heritage, c2012.
Physical Description:
240 p., [16] p. of plates : ill. (some col.), ports. ; 23 cm.
ISBN:
9781927051559
Abstract:
Using text and images, it is a collection of stories about how Canadians "found Japan, " the first place they reached when travelling westward across the Pacific. These connections began as early as 1848, when the adventurous son of a Hudson's Bay Company trader tempted fate by smuggling himself, disguised as a shipwrecked sailor, into the closed and exotic land of the shoguns. He was followed by an intriguing cast of characters--missionaries, educators, businessmen, social activists, political figures, diplomats, soldiers and occasional misfits--who experienced a rapidly changing Japan as it underwent its remarkable transformation from a largely feudal society to a modern state. Now, when the world is becoming more Asia-centric, Finding Japan provides glimpses into an earlier era that challenged conventional perceptions about Canadian connections across the Pacific.
Contents:
Arriving (1848-1900). Inspired madness ; Those seductive treaty ports ; Missions and mountains ; No geisha ; Highway to the East -- Growing (1900-30). Myths and markets ; King's Japan ; Flaming passion ; The great quake and commerce ; Sir Herbert and the legation -- Struggling (1930-50). The dark valley ; War and reconciliation ; Norman Sensei.
Language:
English