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Envisioning diplomacy: Japanese ambassadors in early modern Europe
Alternate title
Japanese ambassadors in early modern Europe
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Abstract
"In the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, Japan sent its first diplomatic delegations to visit the popes and dignitaries of Europe. European artists portrayed these historic ambassadors--the Tenshō embassy (1582-90) and the Keichō embassy (1613-20)--in numerous oil paintings, frescoes, drawings, and prints. Envisioning Diplomacy analyzes these images--including newly discovered and lost works--within their cross-cultural and diplomatic contexts. Drawing on extensive and geographically expansive archival research, art historian Mayu Fujikawa investigates how the embassies were received and either assimilated or differentiated at European courts. She demonstrates how delegates' gifts to their hosts, their Europeanized kimonos, and the Western clothes they wore while traveling functioned as tools of soft diplomacy. Fujikawa also shows how printed materials functioned much as news does today, promoting the embassies widely and conveying information about the guests and their striking physical appearance. Envisioning Diplomacy offers a fascinating look at the political, social, and cultural meanings of visual materials created around the embassies and should be of great interest to scholars, students, and general readers interested in early modern European art and history, costume history, diplomatic history, and Japanese and global studies." -- Publisher's website.
Contents
Transforming seminary students into ambassadors -- Kimono performances and ad hoc gifts -- Cross-cultural dressing in Japan and Europe -- Grand receptions for global fame -- Connecting trilateral ambitions beyond time and space -- Martyrs, bishops, and missionary power struggles -- Illustrating news in Italy and beyond.
Publisher
Publication
University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press, [2025]
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ISBN
- 0271099259
- 9780271099255
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