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During the period of the Tokugawa shogunate's seclusion policy from
about 1630 onwards there was very little European interaction with
the Japanese except through the restricted Dutch presence at
Nagasaki. During this period, however, Russians exploring Siberia
and the Russian Far East came into contact with Japan, and further
exploration and information collecting was encouraged by the
Russian government, culminating in the first official Russian
Embassy to Japan in 1792. This book examines the Russian discourse
on Japan in the period, tracing the gradual accumulation of
knowledge, and the development of Russian views, sometimes
distorted, about Japan. The book includes key historical documents,
some translated into English for the first time. The book is a
prequel to the author's previous book, Russian Views of Japan,
1792-1913: An Anthology of Early Travel Writing.
Before Japan was 'opened up' in the 1850s, contact with Russia as
well as other western maritime nations was extremely limited. Yet
from the early eighteenth century onwards, as a result of their
expanding commercial interests in East Asia and the North Pacific,
Russians had begun to encounter Japanese and were increasingly
eager to establish diplomatic and trading relations with Japan.
This book presents rare narratives written by Russians, including
official envoys, scholars and, later, tourists, who visited Japan
between 1792 and 1913. The introduction and notes set these
narratives in the context of the history of Russo-Japanese
relations and the genre of European travel writing, showing how the
Russian writers combined ethnographic interests with the assertion
of Russian and European values, simultaneously inscribing power
relations and negotiating cultural difference.
Before Japan was 'opened up' in the 1850s, contact with Russia as
well as other western maritime nations was extremely limited. Yet
from the early eighteenth century onwards, as a result of their
expanding commercial interests in East Asia and the North Pacific,
Russians had begun to encounter Japanese and were increasingly
eager to establish diplomatic and trading relations with Japan.
This book presents rare narratives written by Russians - explorers,
official envoys, scholars and, later, tourists - who visited Japan
between 1792 and 1913. The introduction and notes set these
narratives in the context of the history of Russo-Japanese
relations and the genre of European travel writing, showing how the
Russian writers combined ethnographic interests with the assertion
of Russian and European values, simultaneously inscribing power
relations and negotiating cultural difference. Students of Japanese
history, nineteenth-century Russia, literature and cultural studies
will find this book an invaluable insight into the contact between
two civilisations at a time when they were particularly ignorant of
each other.
During the period of the Tokugawa shogunate's seclusion policy from
about 1630 onwards there was very little European interaction with
the Japanese except through the restricted Dutch presence at
Nagasaki. During this period, however, Russians exploring Siberia
and the Russian Far East came into contact with Japan, and further
exploration and information collecting was encouraged by the
Russian government, culminating in the first official Russian
Embassy to Japan in 1792. This book examines the Russian discourse
on Japan in the period, tracing the gradual accumulation of
knowledge, and the development of Russian views, sometimes
distorted, about Japan. The book includes key historical documents,
some translated into English for the first time. The book is a
prequel to the author's previous book, Russian Views of Japan,
1792-1913: An Anthology of Early Travel Writing.
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