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Recent interesting read: Unbeaten Tracks in Japan by that indefatigable Victorian traveler Isabella Bird. This records, in letters to her sister, a 1878 journey through Tohoku and Hokkaido. Largely because I've never seen much by way of the conditions in the countryside mid-Meiji period.
Bird is not a completely reliable or unbiased observer (and I wonder just how much she's failing to see that I don't know enough to recognize), and when she reaches Hokkaido, among the Ainu, she becomes an Amateur Victorian Anthropologist, Wince-Worthy Variety. However, comma, she's a curious and generally sympathetic observer, is far less orientalizing than many Western writers of the period (AVAWWV aside), and has a lively and entertaining style.
Also, it's amusing to see her casually press "Dr. Hepburn" into use as an interpreter in Yokohama.
---L.
Bird is not a completely reliable or unbiased observer (and I wonder just how much she's failing to see that I don't know enough to recognize), and when she reaches Hokkaido, among the Ainu, she becomes an Amateur Victorian Anthropologist, Wince-Worthy Variety. However, comma, she's a curious and generally sympathetic observer, is far less orientalizing than many Western writers of the period (AVAWWV aside), and has a lively and entertaining style.
Also, it's amusing to see her casually press "Dr. Hepburn" into use as an interpreter in Yokohama.
---L.
no subject
Date: 6 February 2012 08:53 pm (UTC)---L.
no subject
Date: 6 February 2012 09:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 6 February 2012 10:38 pm (UTC)Edited to fix misplaced modifier.
---L.
no subject
Date: 7 February 2012 07:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 7 February 2012 02:23 pm (UTC)---L.