Breaking Barriers: Travel and the State in Early Modern Japan

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Council on East Asian Studies, Harvard University, 1994 - 372 ページ

Travel in Tokugawa Japan was officially controlled by bakufu and domainal authorities via an elaborate system of barriers, or sekisho, and travel permits; commoners, however, found ways to circumvent these barriers, frequently ignoring the laws designed to control their mobility. In this study, Constantine Vaporis challenges the notion that this system of travel regulations prevented widespread travel, maintaining instead that a "culture of movement" in Japan developed in the Tokugawa era.

Using a combination of governmental documentation and travel literature, diaries, and wood-block prints, Vaporis examines the development of travel as recreation; he discusses the impact of pilgrimage and the institutionalization of alms-giving on the freedom of movement commoners enjoyed. By the end of the Tokugawa era, the popular nature of travel and a sophisticated system of roads were well established. Vaporis explores the reluctance of the bakufu to enforce its travel laws, and in doing so, beautifully evokes the character of the journey through Tokugawa Japan.

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目次

INTRODUCTION I
1
THE ARMS AND Legs of the Realm
17
THE SOCIAL ORGANIZATION OF THE GOKAidō Network
57
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著者について (1994)

Constantine Nomikos Vaporis is Associate Professor of History at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.

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