Description
They Came to Japan collects and translates excerpts from more than thirty early European accounts of Japan, many previously unpublished and extremely rare. Arranged into thematic chapters on aspects of Japanese society, these commentaries are most interesting not for what they say about the Japan but about the European writers themselves. Their attitude towards the newly discovered country and its inhabitants is clearly reflected in their letters and reports, especially when implicit comparisons are made between Japan and Europe. During the course of their discovery of the East, the Europeans had generally adopted the role of representatives of a superior race. They had taken for granted that Europe was synonymous with the civilised world, and thus the discovery of the highly developed Japanese culture and civilisation, which had grown up quite independently of Europe, came as a salutary shock. Because they could not aggressively assert themselves by force of arms in such a remote place, as was their norm, this was to be the first confrontation between East and West on equal terms.
About the Author
Michael Cooper obtained a doctorate from the University of Oxford. He was the editor of the academic journal, Monumenta Nipponica in Tokyo for 26 years. He has written extensively on early Japanese-European cultural relations.
Book Information
ISBN 9780939512737
Author Michael Cooper
Format Paperback
Page Count 464
Imprint The University of Michigan Press
Publisher The University of Michigan Press
Weight(grams) 705g