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Kaempfer's Japan: Tokugawa Culture Observed

PaperbackApril 1, 1999
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ISBN-13: 9780824820664 ISBN-10: 0824820665
Publisher
University of Hawaii Press
Binding
Paperback
Published
April 1, 1999
Weight
2.5 lbs
Dimensions
25.40×3.20×17.80 cm

About this book

Kaempfer's Japan: Tokugawa Culture Observed by Kaempfer, Engelbert. Paperback edition. ISBN: 9780824820664.

Engelbert Kaempfers History of Japan was a best-seller from the moment it was published in London in 1727. Born in Westphalia in 1651, Kaempfer traveled throughout the Near and Far East before settling in Japan as physician to the trading settlement of the Dutch East India Company at Nagasaki. During his two years residence, he made two extensive trips around Japan in 1691 and 1692, collecting, according to the British historian Boxer, "an astonishing amount of valuable and accurate information." He also learned all he could from the few Japanese who came to Deshima for instruction in the European sciences. To these observations, Kaempfer added details he had gathered from a wide reading of travelers accounts and the reports of previous trading delegations. The result was the first scholarly study of Tokugawa Japan in the West, a work that greatly influenced the European view of Japan throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, serving as a reference for a variety of works ranging from encyclopedias to the libretto of "The Mikado." Kaempfers work remains one of the most valuable sources for historians of the Tokugawa period. The narrative describes what no Japanese was permitted to record (the details of the shoguns castle, for example) and what no Japanese thought worthy of recording (the minutiae of everyday life). However, all previous translations of the History are flawed, being based on the work of an eighteenth-century Swiss translator or that of the German editor some fifty years later who had little knowledge of Japan and resented Kaempfers praise of the heathen country. Beatrice Bodart-Baileys impressive new translation of this classic, which reflects careful study of Kaempfers original manuscript, reclaims the work for the modern reader, placing it in the context of what is currently known about Tokugawa Japan and restoring the humor and freshness of Kaempfers observations and impressions. In Kaempfers Japan we have, for the first time, an accurate and thoroughly readable annotated translation of Kaempfers colorful account of pre-modern Japan.