ABSTRACT

Before Japan was 'opened up' in the 1850s, contact with Russia as well as other western maritime nations was extremely limited. Yet from the early eighteenth century onwards, as a result of their expanding commercial interests in East Asia and the North Pacific, Russians had begun to encounter Japanese and were increasingly eager to establish diplomatic and trading relations with Japan. This book presents rare narratives written by Russians, including official envoys, scholars and, later, tourists, who visited Japan between 1792 and 1913. The introduction and notes set these narratives in the context of the history of Russo-Japanese relations and the genre of European travel writing, showing how the Russian writers combined ethnographic interests with the assertion of Russian and European values, simultaneously inscribing power relations and negotiating cultural difference.

chapter |31 pages

Introduction

Japan through Russian eyes – history and context

chapter |28 pages

1 Adam Laxman

Journal of Laxman's embassy to Japan(Ezo, 1792–3)

chapter |21 pages

2 Ivan Krusenstern

Voyage round the world (Nagasaki, 1804–5)

chapter |22 pages

3 Vasilii Golovnin

Narrative of my captivity in Japan (Ezo, 1811)

chapter |15 pages

4 Ivan Goncharov

The frigate Pallada (Nagasaki, 1853)

chapter |7 pages

5 A. Kornilov

News from Japan (Edo, 1859)

chapter |23 pages

6 Sergei Maksimov

In the East (Hakodate, late 1850s)

chapter |14 pages

7 Ivan Zarubin

Around Asia (Nagasaki, 1880)

chapter |8 pages

8 A. Cherevkova

On the Japanese railways (Nagoya, 1890)

chapter |6 pages

9 Andrei Krasnov

Around the islands of the Far East (Nagasaki, 1892)

chapter |11 pages

10 Nikolai Garin-Mikhailovskii

Around Korea, Manchuria and the Liaodong Peninsula (Nagasaki, Yokohama, 1898)

chapter |17 pages

11 Vladimir Semenov

The price of blood (Kyoto, 1905)

chapter |6 pages

12 E. Kobiakova

My first day in Japan (Gifu, 1913)