[Rarebooks] FS: Honshu, Japan photo album

Bob Petrilla petrillabooks at gmail.com
Mon Jun 5 07:56:47 EDT 2017


Japan, Honshu . PHOTOGRAPH ALBUM OF 116 PROFESSIONAL IMAGES, MOSTLY FROM
MIE-KEN, CIRCA 1895-1925, DURING THE MEIJI AND TAISHO PERIODS.

Oblong, string-tied album of black cardstock leaves, 11” x 13”, photographs
mounted on 35pp, blanks at the rear. Bound in black, flexible boards with
an embossed sailing ship and gilt lettering (Photo-Album) on the cover.
Pasted in are 116 albumen and silver gelatin prints, ranging from small
candids to 8 ½” x 10 ½” group portraits, a few fading, overall sharp and
clean. Laid into the album are a Japanese news article, a small head-shot
of an older gentleman, and a watercolor portrait (10" x 8 ¼”) of a man’s
face.  Very Good condition.

Most of the photographs in this album. circa 1895-1925, were taken in
Mie-Ken (or “Mie prefecture”), part of the Kansai region on the main island
of Honshu. The group and individual portraits reflect new social and
economic developments and cultural norms that emerged during this period.
Subjects are shown in either traditional Japanese garments or in Western
dress. Group shots often depict people wearing both styles within the same
picture. There are many group shots of schoolchildren of both sexes, young
people in uniforms posed before buildings with Japanese signs on them, as
well as many formal group shots of families, some “nuclear”—husband, wife,
children— others extended by relatives. Individual shots of young children
show them almost invariably in western dress, one posed with his tricycle,
young boys in uniform, a young girl in kimono showing a dance move while
holding a fan, infants in traditional robes, and young men in business
suits. Several birdseye views feature very large groups of rural people in
traditional dress, posed outdoors. Among the most striking photographs are:
one (8 ½” x 10 ½”) showing 11 doctors/ medical students posed around two
corpses (one smiling happily) being dissected on two tables; four women and
one man posed around a table doing handwork (weaving, tatting?); men in
western dress, “strap-holding” inside a streetcar; and 5 actors (2 male, 3
female) on stage in costume. ~~ The Meiji period (1868-1912) saw the
restoration of the Emperor (this time with a centralized bureaucracy behind
him) after years of shogun rule. Japan was under heavy influence from
Western political, economic, and educational models, and the country became
more capitalist, industrial, and progressively democratic, offering free
education to youngsters of both genders. Transportation and communications
systems were modernized, the feudal lords and samurai lost their power, and
a powerful national army and navy were created. By the early 1870s, the
government declared all classes of people to be equal. The Taishu period
(1912-26) saw the continued influence of Western culture, and values such
as efficiency and individualism continued to replace more traditional ones.
Japanese participation on the world stage continued to grow as the nation
co-founded the League of Nations and emerged on the winning side in WWI.
By 1925, there was universal male suffrage in Japan. Corruption in
government increased, however, and the West began to form negative views of
this newly-powerful, non-white nation, exacerbated by Japan’s poor
treatment of China.   $1,200.00

Postpaid in US.  Usual trade terms.



    *  R & A  Petrilla*



*          Antiquarian Booksellers                     PO Box 306
   Roosevelt, NJ 08555*


*           bob at petrillabooks.com <%28609%29%20426-4999>**        Member:
 ABAA, ILAB, IOBA*


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