nanban-harvest

From Nanbanjin to Kabukimono: Portraying Iberians in Early Modern Japan

JournalÜbersetzungskulturen der Frühen Neuzeit
PublisherSpringer Nature
DOI10.1007/978-3-662-70424-0_3
OpenAlexW4413959697
Languageen
ISSN2661-8109
OA?yes
Statusdownloaded

Abstract

Abstract Nanbanjin —‘southern barbarians’—was the term used by the Japanese to refer to the first Europeans to arrive in Japan, in 1543. Initially, these men—with their strange appearances and habits, unfamiliar languages, and new and alien religion—provoked curiosity. By 1639, however, perceptions had changed, and the nanbanjin had come to be associated with deviant behaviour and unconventional conduct, similarly to the kabukimono —local people living at the margins of society, who often borrowed elements of nanbanjin dress and behaviour as part of their aesthetic of subversion. The nanbanjin were no longer welcome in Japan, and mistrust prevailed over the initial curiosity. This chapter analyzes the portrayal of nanbanjin in Japanese written accounts and images in the period, aiming to shed light on the evolution of their identification through a complex translation process within the context of early modern transnational relations.

Matched Nanban terms

  • anchor nanban
  • anchor nanbanjin

Provenance

  • openalex (W4413959697)
    2026-04-30T19:58:51.005260+00:00

Candidate PDF URLs

PSourceURLLast attemptLast error
30 openalex https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/978-3-662-70424-0_3.pdf 2026-04-30T16:01:38.994125+00:00

Downloaded PDF

Open PDF · sha256: 562b7dd0ba4d8a11b85ac15d410aa70f82c966219010c8f3a991e0462a8f007c

Extras

openalex_conceptsHistory
openalex_topicsPhilippine History and Culture; Hispanic-African Historical Relations; Japanese History and Culture
crossref_date2025
crossref_reference_count51
crossref_publisherSpringer Berlin Heidelberg