nanban-harvest

The Curious Case of the Camel in Modern Japan

DOI10.1163/9789004518346
OpenAlexW4220758538
Languageen
OA?no
Statuspending

Abstract

In The Curious Case of the Camel in Modern Japan Ayelet Zohar critically analyzes camel images as a metonymy for Asia, and Japanese attitudes towards the continent. The book reads into encounters with the exotic animals, from nanban art, realist Dutch-influenced illustrations, through misemono roadshows of the first camel-pair imported in 1821. Modernity and Japan’s wars of Pan-Asiatic fantasies associated camels with Asia’s poverty, bringing camels into zoos, tourist venues, and military zones, as lowly beasts of burden, while postwar images project the imago of exotica and foreignness on camels as Buddhist ‘peace’ messengers. Zohar convincingly argues that in the Japanese imagination, camels serve as signifiers of Asia as Otherness, the opposite of Japan’s desire for self-association with Western cultures.

Matched Nanban terms

  • anchor nanban

Provenance

  • openalex (W4220758538)
    2026-04-30T19:55:09.157389+00:00

Candidate PDF URLs

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Extras

openalex_conceptsBuddhism; Modernity; Imago; Tourism; East Asia; Poverty; Geography; Ancient history; History
openalex_topicsGlobal Maritime and Colonial Histories; Philippine History and Culture; Travel Writing and Literature