Chapter 1 1 Incident in Yokohama Harbor Chapter 2 2 The Prodigy: 1836-1870 Chapter 3 3 Japan to 1870: Dizzying Change Chapter 4 4 The Newcomer: 1870-1873 Chapter 5 5 Japan, 1870-1875: Consolidating Power Chapter 6 6 Writing for Japan: 1873-1876 Chapter 7 7 Japan, 1876-1881: Growing Pains Chapter 8 8 The Tokio Times—"That Naughty Yankee Boy": 1877-1880 Chapter 9 9 Japan, 1881-1885: The Outsiders Chapter 10 10 A Change in Course: 1880-1885 Chapter 11 11 Japan, 1885-1892: Imperial Constitutionalism Chapter 12 12 Interesting Times: 1886-1892 Chapter 13 13 Japan, 1893-1901: Modernity—And All That Meant Chapter 14 14 Evening Years: 1892-1901 Chapter 15 15 Epilogue
James L. Huffman is H. Orth Hirt Professor of History at Wittenberg University.
This well-written book will not only interest specialists of Japan
but will be fascinating reading for anyone interested in history.
Highly recommended.
*CHOICE*
James Huffman's well-written biography of the American journalist
Edward House is a welcome addition. . . . A detailed, factual
narrative that flows smoothly, allowing the reader to follow
House's life as it is set against a complicated historical
background.
*Persimmon*
James Huffman's earnest and compelling, also meticulously
researched, story reveals a huge amount about Western attitudes
toward Japan in the Meiji era, also about Japanese methods of
making itself more of a presence in the international arena.
Beautifully researched and a lively read, this is a major
contribution to the historiography of Japan–U.S. relations.
*The Daily Yomiuri*
A Yankee in Meiji Japan is at once an engrossing biography of a
nineteenth-century American journalist and an absorbing history of
Japan in the initial stages of its modern transformation. As a
pioneer interpreter of Japan for the English-speaking world, E. H.
House struggled against stereotypes of exoticism to represent the
country he loved as progressive and civilized. Huffman offers a
fascinating and innovative account of the interaction between
personality, press, and politics. This is history at its best:
superbly crafted, painstakingly documented, and brilliantly
written.
*M. William Steele, International Christian University*
Huffman's highly readable account of E. H. House's life will appeal
to a wide audience, but especially to non-specialists, and by
focusing on a sympathetic observer of Japan, Huffman has found an
effective vehicle for exploring a number of interesting themes in
the history of the Meiji period.
*Pacific Affairs*
Huffman has provided a well-researched life of the Yankee of his
title, Edward H. House.
*Journal of Asian History*
A century later Professor Huffman has dispelled the obscurity which
enshrouded the life and work of a man who was a Yankee, an
American, a pioneer in the development pf American-Japanese
friendship, and an unsung hero who fought valiantly against a
crippling disability. We are in his debt.
*John M. Maki, University of Massachusetts at Amherst*
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