Japan and American Children's Books

Japan and American Children's Books

A Journey

Rimer, J. Thomas; Jagusch, Sybille; Hayden, Carla D.

Rutgers University Press

06/2021

385

Mole

Inglês

9781978822627

15 a 20 dias

1388

Descrição não disponível.
Contents
Foreword by Carla D. Hayden
Introduction by J. Thomas Rimer
Note to the Reader
Prologue: Japan in Early Books for Children: From Comenius to Commodore Perry
Part I From Early Children's Books to the End of the Nineteenth Century
1 They Went to Japan: The Post-Perry Travelers and Their Stories for the Young
2 Fact and Fiction: Travelogues and Adventure Tales about Japan to the Turn of the Twentieth Century
3 Takejiro Hasegawa: The Foreigners' Publisher
4 Japan in St. Nicholas Magazine
5 The Children's Book Writers and Their Information Sources: From Marco Polo to Madame Chrysantheme
Part II The Twentieth Century
6 Globetrotting in Children's Books: From 1900 to World War II
7 Louise Seaman Bechtel: America's First Children's Book Editor and Her Books about Japan
8 The Post-World War II Years
9 Three Japanese American Journeys
10 Into the Twenty-First Century
Appendix: The Gatekeepers: Leading American Children's Librarians and Their Influence on Children's Books about Japan
Selected Bibliography and Further Reading
Acknowledgments
Notes
Illustration Credits
Index
About the Author
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Japanese-American; gunboat diplomacy; Commodore Matthew Perry; Matthew Perry; Japan; early nineteenth century; beginning 21st century; Sybille A. Jagusch; children's book; early European children's books; United States; Library of Congress; western writers and illustrators; western writers; western; illustrators; late nineteenth-century travelogues; travelogues; children's publishing genre; Adventure Tales; Marco Polo; Madame Chrysantheme; Globetrotting; St. Nicholas Magazine; Takejiro Hasegawa; publisher; Post-World War II; Louise Seaman Bechtel; Children's Books about Japan; The Twentieth Century; St. Nicholas