Book Blog
New Books
Future Books
Textbooks
Special Offers
Award Winners
Series Titles
Email Notices
Catalogs
Update Account
View Cart
Checkout
 
HomeBooksJournalsContact UsLogin


252 pp. July 2009

paper , ISBN 978-9971-69-463-0, $28.00

Keywords: Asia
Southeast Asia
China
Japan
history
Asian Port Cities, 1600-1800: Local and Foreign Cultural Interactions

ed. by Haneda Masashi

Distributed for NUS Press

Asian port cities in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were the site of intensive cultural contact involving a broad spectrum of participants from across the world. These interactions raised questions of communication for merchants who conducted business in the port cities and of regulation and control for the officials who governed them.

By drawing comparisons among the port cities of East, Southeast and South Asia where European East India Companies maintained trading centers, this volume goes beyond national histories to examine cultural interactions on a regional basis. The authors draw on the rich literature relating to cross-cultural interactions between the Dutch and the Japanese in Nagasaki in discussing issues that range from architecture, mercantile and artistic communication, business transactions and dispute settlement to family issues, clothing, housing, and social relations associated with food. Their work yields intriguing new interpretations of the Asian maritime world that will interest historians concerned with Europe or Asia during the early modern period, as well as students of material culture.

For sale only in the U.S., its dependencies, Canada, and Mexico

Haneda Masashi is professor of history at the University of Tokyo, where he serves as director of the Institute of Oriental Culture and as deputy director of the Center for Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.




© 2009 University of Hawai`i Press * 2840 Kolowalu Street * Honolulu, HI 96822-1888 USA
Phone: 1-808-956-8255