Travellers' Visions
French Literary Encounters with Japan, 1887-2004
Distributed for Liverpool University Press
196 pages
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12 halftones
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6 x 9
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© 2005
Travellers' Visions adds another perspective to ongoing debates over colonialism with an examination of the intercultural relations between France, a major colonial empire for nearly three centuries, and Japan, a country that has remained mostly autonomous throughout its existence.
In this analytic history of French literary images of Japan, from soon after its reopening to the West to the present day, Kawakami examines the work of many of France's most revered authors including Marcel Proust, Paul Claudel, and Roland Barthes, along with other, lesser-known writers and artists, such as Loti and Farrère, as they embarked on journeys—literary and real—to this "exotic" land. Authors are discussed according to type— journalists, diplomats, or collectors, for example—and the close readings are accompanied by Gérard Macé's beautiful and rarely seen photographs. Travellers' Visions offers new clarity to current intellectual debates and will be a valuable resource to students and scholars of French literature and Asian history alike.
In this analytic history of French literary images of Japan, from soon after its reopening to the West to the present day, Kawakami examines the work of many of France's most revered authors including Marcel Proust, Paul Claudel, and Roland Barthes, along with other, lesser-known writers and artists, such as Loti and Farrère, as they embarked on journeys—literary and real—to this "exotic" land. Authors are discussed according to type— journalists, diplomats, or collectors, for example—and the close readings are accompanied by Gérard Macé's beautiful and rarely seen photographs. Travellers' Visions offers new clarity to current intellectual debates and will be a valuable resource to students and scholars of French literature and Asian history alike.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Modes of Travel, Modes of Seeing
1. Travels through Objects: Marcel Proust, Edmond de Goncourt, Pierre Loti
2. Journalists and Barbarians: Anatole France, Claude Farrère, Henri Michaux
3. Walking towards Japan: Paul Claudel's co-naissance of the East
4. Postwar Travellers and Photographic Writing: Roland Barthes, Michel Butor, Gérard Macé
Conclusion: Textual Worlds
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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Asian Studies: East Asia
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