Kapitel
Öffentlich zugänglich
Note on Transliteration
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgments xi
- Note on Transliteration xv
- 1. Introduction: A Historiographical Overview 1
-
Part One. “History” Reviewed and Visualized
- 2. Cultural Change in Nineteenth-Century Japan 31
- 3. History Painting in the Meiji Era: A Consideration of the Issues 56
- 4. Mori Ōgai’s Phantom Partner: The Development of a Public for Western-style Painting in Meiji Japan 65
-
Part Two. Resituating Yokohama
- 5. Innovational Adaptations: Contacts between Japanese and Western Artists in Yokohama, 1859–1899 83
- 6. Expectation and Authenticity in Meiji Tourist Photography 114
- 7. Gorgeous with Glitter and Gold: Miyagawa Kōzan and the Role of Satsuma Export Ware in the Early Meiji Ceramic Industry 133
-
Part Three. Reconfiguring Painting Traditions
- 8. In Quest of the Real: Portrayal and Photography in Japanese Painting Theory 153
- 9. Meiji Response to Bunjinga 177
- 10. The Image of Kannon as Compassionate Mother in Meiji Art and Culture 197
-
Part Four. Architecture and Expositions Intent and Implementation
- 11. Reassessing the Rokumeikan 227
- 12. Japanese Imperial Architecture: From Thomas Roger Smith to Itō Chūta 240
- 13. Japan “Abroad” at the Chicago Exposition, 1893 254
- Contributors 281
- Index 283
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgments xi
- Note on Transliteration xv
- 1. Introduction: A Historiographical Overview 1
-
Part One. “History” Reviewed and Visualized
- 2. Cultural Change in Nineteenth-Century Japan 31
- 3. History Painting in the Meiji Era: A Consideration of the Issues 56
- 4. Mori Ōgai’s Phantom Partner: The Development of a Public for Western-style Painting in Meiji Japan 65
-
Part Two. Resituating Yokohama
- 5. Innovational Adaptations: Contacts between Japanese and Western Artists in Yokohama, 1859–1899 83
- 6. Expectation and Authenticity in Meiji Tourist Photography 114
- 7. Gorgeous with Glitter and Gold: Miyagawa Kōzan and the Role of Satsuma Export Ware in the Early Meiji Ceramic Industry 133
-
Part Three. Reconfiguring Painting Traditions
- 8. In Quest of the Real: Portrayal and Photography in Japanese Painting Theory 153
- 9. Meiji Response to Bunjinga 177
- 10. The Image of Kannon as Compassionate Mother in Meiji Art and Culture 197
-
Part Four. Architecture and Expositions Intent and Implementation
- 11. Reassessing the Rokumeikan 227
- 12. Japanese Imperial Architecture: From Thomas Roger Smith to Itō Chūta 240
- 13. Japan “Abroad” at the Chicago Exposition, 1893 254
- Contributors 281
- Index 283