Argues for the development of a late sixteenth and early seventeenth century Japanese cartographic practice that reflected a combination of traditions that were commonly practiced by seafarers traversing East Asian waters.Early Modern Japan Networ
This essay focuses on various forms of information and transformative exchange promoted within the s...
This research note explores the possibility of approaching navigational instruments not as evidence ...
These two 9,000 word chapters on design in Japan c.1750-2000 were commissioned by the Bard Graduate ...
UID/HIS/04666/2013The panel investigates a selection of seventeenth-century Japanese cartographic fo...
Of all the technical and scientific developments that made possible the European maritime expansion,...
UID/HIS/04666/2013The paper analyses a cartographic byobu held at Kanshinji in Kawachinagano that do...
In examining the spread of Dutch cartographical knowledge to Japan, this thesis intends to throw som...
The following paper investigates the ways in which European cartography blended with Japanese Buddhi...
This project examines the fraught diplomatic and commercial relations between Tokugawa Japan (1600–1...
The purport of this paper, with its somewhat odd title, is firstly, to indicate the fact that it was...
Globalization, Localization, and Japanese Studies in the Asia-Pacific Region : Past, Present, Future...
This thesis examines the manuscript Amerika shinwa (New Stories about America, 1844) by Maekawa Bunz...
It is a hard and demanding job to trace the origin and spread of a certain word, which at times is e...
This paper tries to trace back to 16th-18th century in which tributary trade system in East Asia and...
The Routledge Companion to Marine and Maritime Worlds, 1400‒1800 explores early modern maritime his...
This essay focuses on various forms of information and transformative exchange promoted within the s...
This research note explores the possibility of approaching navigational instruments not as evidence ...
These two 9,000 word chapters on design in Japan c.1750-2000 were commissioned by the Bard Graduate ...
UID/HIS/04666/2013The panel investigates a selection of seventeenth-century Japanese cartographic fo...
Of all the technical and scientific developments that made possible the European maritime expansion,...
UID/HIS/04666/2013The paper analyses a cartographic byobu held at Kanshinji in Kawachinagano that do...
In examining the spread of Dutch cartographical knowledge to Japan, this thesis intends to throw som...
The following paper investigates the ways in which European cartography blended with Japanese Buddhi...
This project examines the fraught diplomatic and commercial relations between Tokugawa Japan (1600–1...
The purport of this paper, with its somewhat odd title, is firstly, to indicate the fact that it was...
Globalization, Localization, and Japanese Studies in the Asia-Pacific Region : Past, Present, Future...
This thesis examines the manuscript Amerika shinwa (New Stories about America, 1844) by Maekawa Bunz...
It is a hard and demanding job to trace the origin and spread of a certain word, which at times is e...
This paper tries to trace back to 16th-18th century in which tributary trade system in East Asia and...
The Routledge Companion to Marine and Maritime Worlds, 1400‒1800 explores early modern maritime his...
This essay focuses on various forms of information and transformative exchange promoted within the s...
This research note explores the possibility of approaching navigational instruments not as evidence ...
These two 9,000 word chapters on design in Japan c.1750-2000 were commissioned by the Bard Graduate ...