Victorian Women's Travel Writing on Meiji Japan

£37.79

Victorian Women's Travel Writing on Meiji Japan

Hospitable Friendship

Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers

Author: Tomoe Kumojima

Dinosaur mascot

Collection: Oxford English Monographs

Language: English

Published by: OUP Oxford

Published on: 13 January 2022

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 1 Mb

ISBN: 9780192644862


Victorian Women''s Travel Writing on Meiji Japan: Hospitable Friendship

Examines forgotten stories of cross-cultural friendship and intimacy between Victorian female travel writers and Meiji Japanese. Drawing on unpublished primary sources and contemporary Japanese literature hithero untranslated into English, it highlights the open subjectivity and additive relationality of Isabella Bird, Mary Crawford Fraser, and Marie Stopes in their interactions with Japanese hosts.

Victorian Women''s Travel Writing on Meiji Japan demonstrates how travel narratives and literary works about non-colonial Japan complicate and challenge Oriental stereotypes and imperial binaries. It traces the shifts in the representation of Japan in Victorian discourse from obsequious mousmé to virile samurai alongside transitions in the Anglo-Japanese bilateral relationship and global geopolitical events.

Considering the ethical and political implications of how Victorian women wrote about their Japanese friends, it examines how female travellers created counter discourses. It charts the unexplored terrain of female interracial and cross-cultural friendship and love in Victorian literature, emphasizing the agency of female travellers against the scholarly tendency to depoliticize their literary praxis.

It also offers parallel narratives of three Meiji women in Britain - Tsuda Umeko, Yasui Tetsu, and Yosano Akiko - and transnational feminist alliance. The book is a celebration of the political possibility of female friendship and literature, and a reminder of the ethical responsibility of representing racial and cultural others.

Show moreShow less