The present paper explores the social lives of European timepieces as a particular set of objects in late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century Japan, when the archipelago first encountered the “Southern Barbarians” from Portugal and Spain. Rather than viewing them solely as instruments of time measurement or as decorative objects, I discuss clocks as actors that moved within networks of exchange primarily between Europe and Japan, but also, significantly, within East Asia and Japan itself. Along their trajectory, these devices assumed shifting and at times contradictory meanings for various actors; this is particularly true in view of the fundamental clash between European and Japanese systems of time-reckoning, which essentially render...
This article offers a case study in the nature of uses of the European past in East Asia at a time w...
With the arrival of Portuguese ships in the mid-16th century, European glass was introduced to Japan...
This study examines the practice of 'alternate attendance' (sankin kōtai), in which the daimyo lords...
AbstractThe present paper explores the social lives of European timepieces as a particular set of ob...
This paper explores how the Jesuits in Japan’s “Christian Century (1549-c.1650)” used Western mechan...
Between the years 1609 and 1641, merchants of the English and Dutch East India Companies (EIC and VO...
Historical intercultural interactions between Europeans and Japanese during the seventeenth century ...
Historical intercultural interactions between Europeans and Japanese during the seventeenth century ...
This article offers a critical perspective on practices of intercultural giftgiving and their role i...
This article offers a critical perspective on practices of intercultural gift-giving and their role ...
Time was variable in medieval Japan, with plural morphologies of time coexisting simultaneously. Not...
This article aims at exploring Japan and its cultural and symbolic representation in the Republic of...
When the Edo shogunate implemented mari-time prohibitions (kaikin) in the 1630s, it marked the begin...
This dissertation explores as sites of meaning-making the ritual activities of embassies dispatched ...
In colonial and cross-cultural encounters, different time-scales and variable means for registering ...
This article offers a case study in the nature of uses of the European past in East Asia at a time w...
With the arrival of Portuguese ships in the mid-16th century, European glass was introduced to Japan...
This study examines the practice of 'alternate attendance' (sankin kōtai), in which the daimyo lords...
AbstractThe present paper explores the social lives of European timepieces as a particular set of ob...
This paper explores how the Jesuits in Japan’s “Christian Century (1549-c.1650)” used Western mechan...
Between the years 1609 and 1641, merchants of the English and Dutch East India Companies (EIC and VO...
Historical intercultural interactions between Europeans and Japanese during the seventeenth century ...
Historical intercultural interactions between Europeans and Japanese during the seventeenth century ...
This article offers a critical perspective on practices of intercultural giftgiving and their role i...
This article offers a critical perspective on practices of intercultural gift-giving and their role ...
Time was variable in medieval Japan, with plural morphologies of time coexisting simultaneously. Not...
This article aims at exploring Japan and its cultural and symbolic representation in the Republic of...
When the Edo shogunate implemented mari-time prohibitions (kaikin) in the 1630s, it marked the begin...
This dissertation explores as sites of meaning-making the ritual activities of embassies dispatched ...
In colonial and cross-cultural encounters, different time-scales and variable means for registering ...
This article offers a case study in the nature of uses of the European past in East Asia at a time w...
With the arrival of Portuguese ships in the mid-16th century, European glass was introduced to Japan...
This study examines the practice of 'alternate attendance' (sankin kōtai), in which the daimyo lords...