ABSTRACT

Japan in Australia is a work of cultural history that focuses on context and connection between two nations. It examines how Japan has been imagined, represented and experienced in the Australian context through a variety of settings, historical periods and circumstances.

Beginning with the first recorded contacts between Australians and Japanese in the nineteenth century, the chapters focus on ‘people-to people’ narratives and the myriad multi-dimensional ways in which the two countries are interconnected: from sporting diplomacy to woodblock printing, from artistic metaphors to iconic pop imagery, from the tragedy of war to engagement in peace movements, from technology transfer to community arts. Tracing the trajectory of this 150-year relationship provides an example of how history can turn from fear, enmity and misunderstanding through war, foreign encroachment and the legacy of conflict, to close and intimate connections that result in cultural enrichment and diversification.

This book explores notions of Australia and ‘Australianness’ and Japan and ‘Japaneseness’, to better reflect on the cultural fusion that is contemporary Australia and build the narrative of the Japan–Australia relationship. It will be of interest to academics in the field of Asian, Japanese and Japanese-Pacific studies.

chapter |3 pages

Prologue

Celebrating Japan in Australia

chapter 2|19 pages

Youthful first impressions

Tsurumi Kazuko and Shunsuke in Australia, 1937

chapter 3|19 pages

Forging an Australian artistic modernity

How Japanese woodblock prints informed Margaret Preston’s early paintings and prints

chapter 4|18 pages

Japan-Australia friendship through bat and ball

The Yomiuri Giants’ baseball tour of Australia in 1954

chapter 6|17 pages

Japanese sleeping beauties abroad

Australian retellings of Kawabata Yasunari’s fairy-tale novella

chapter 7|17 pages

The irrepressible magic of Monkey

How a Japanese television drama depicting an ancient Chinese tale became compulsory after-school viewing in Australia

chapter 10|18 pages

The Australian literary scene and Murakami Haruki

Nobel laureate heir apparent or marketing overhype?