ABSTRACT
The seven articles in this edited volume address the complex meanings that visual representations of plants and animals gained in early modern China and Japan. They aim to understand animals and plants in the new contexts of empirical and epistemological concerns, political and social agendas, and cultural interests. In particular, they examine the ways in which scholars, professional painters, and publishers engendered the sociohistorical meanings of the images.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Size: 8.45 MB
chapter 1|24 pages
Singing Frogs: Approaches to Registering Animals in The Nihon Sankai Meisan zue
Title
Size: 4.66 MB
Size: 8.30 MB
Size: 30.82 MB
chapter 4|26 pages
The Return of the Elephants: A Social History of Elephant Watching in Early Modern China
Title
Size: 14.19 MB
Size: 6.19 MB
chapter 6|26 pages
Pictures of Sea Fish (Haiyu tu) and Knowledge of Nature in Eighteenth-Century China
Title
Size: 8.73 MB
chapter 7|30 pages
Treatise (pu) versus Illustration (tu): The Absence and Presence of Illustrations in Pulu Writings on Chinese Nature Studies
Title
Size: 3.70 MB
