ABSTRACT

This volume examines the visual culture of Japan’s transition to modernity, from 1868 to the first decades of the twentieth century.

Through this important moment in Japanese history, contributors reflect on Japan’s transcultural artistic imagination vis-a-vis the discernment, negotiation, assimilation, and assemblage of diverse aesthetic concepts and visual pursuits. The collected chapters show how new cultural notions were partially modified and integrated to become the artistic methods of modern Japan, based on the hybridization of major ideologies, visualities, technologies, productions, formulations, and modes of representation. The book presents case studies of creative transformation demonstrating how new concepts and methods were perceived and altered to match views and theories prevalent in Meiji Japan, and by what means different practitioners negotiated between their existing skills and the knowledge generated from incoming ideas to create innovative modes of practice and representation that reflected the specificity of modern Japanese artistic circumstances.

The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, Japanese studies, Asian studies, and Japanese history, as well as those who use approaches and methods related to globalization, cross-cultural studies, transcultural exchange, and interdisciplinary studies.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

In-Between Temporality and Spatiality: Visual Convergences and Meiji Hybridity

chapter 1|17 pages

Between Kanji and Hiragana

An Allegorical Reading of the Katakana (Non-) Space

chapter 3|12 pages

Classical Greece in Japan

Why Does It Matter? A Postcolonial Perspective

chapter 5|17 pages

Dinner Table Negotiations

Tableware and the Presentation of Japan at the Enryōkan

chapter 6|19 pages

Imaging Industry

Woodblock Prints, Factory Women, and Sericulture in Meiji Japan 1

chapter 7|17 pages

Negotiating Realism

Kawabata Gyokushō's Strive for Modern Japanese Painting

chapter 9|17 pages

Framing Scenery

A Potential History of Landscape Photography in Colonial Hokkaidō

chapter 10|17 pages

Colors of Empire

Watercolor in Meiji Japan