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Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Expected online publication date:
October 2025
Print publication year:
2025
Online ISBN:
9781009534611
Creative Commons:
Creative Common License - CC Creative Common License - BY Creative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/creativelicenses

Book description

This big-picture narrative of modern Japan embeds the archipelago's history in its maritime context. Foregrounding the Kuroshio Current in the Pacific, Jonas Rüegg demonstrates how currents, winds, and animals created a dynamic context to economic, intellectual, and geopolitical reinventions of Japan over the past four centuries. He draws up a novel geography of conflicts and competitions in the making of 'modern' Japan, one that underlines little known actors, sites, and events which have previously been treated as peripheral. This book offers a framework that transcends conventional spatial and temporal categorizations of early modern and modern, shogunal and imperial, insular and global. Guiding the reader from seventeenth-century Pacific explorations to the “opening” of Japan by whalers, coolies, and castaways, and on to the competition over remote islands, Rüegg offers a greater perspective on the role of oceans in the Anthropocene. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

Reviews

‘The Kuroshio Frontier boldly traverses established geographic, intellectual, and historiographical categories and conventions about early modern and modern Japan. Adroitly interweaving individual, local, and national narratives – while simultaneously expounding on relevant global economic and environmental trends – Rüegg convincingly shows the importance of viewing the Japanese past through not only an oceanic gaze but also as part of larger currents of Pacific history.'

Robert Hellyer - Wake Forest University

‘The Kuroshio Frontier is a wonderful addition to the growing body of research which reconsiders Japanese history from an oceanic perspective. Meticulously researched and full of fascinating insights, this book sheds important new light on the ways in which the fluid ocean frontier shaped the emergence of modern Japan.'

Tessa Morris-Suzuki - Professor Emerita, Australian National University

‘By immersing nineteenth-century Japan within Pacific Ocean history, Rüegg reveals the currents connecting subaltern actors on watery frontiers. His innovative approach blurs the divide between the Tokugawa and Meiji periods, combines political and ecological history, and provides a refreshing way of seeing Japan as a part of global history.'

Julia Adeney Thomas - author of Altered Earth: Getting the Anthropocene Right

‘With The Kuroshio Frontier, Rüegg brilliantly recasts Japan's expansion as a story of oceanic entanglements, resource frontiers, and transregional actors too often left out of conventional narratives. This book exemplifies the best of recent Anglophone scholarship that situates Japan, and its archipelago, firmly within the Pacific World.'

Jun Uchida - author of Provincializing Empire: Ōmi Merchants in the Japanese Transpacific Diaspora

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Contents

Full book PDF
  • The Kuroshio Frontier
    pp i-i
  • Cambridge Oceanic Histories - Series page
    pp ii-ii
  • The Kuroshio Frontier - Title page
    pp iii-iii
  • Empire and Environment in the Making of Japan’s Pacific
  • Copyright page
    pp iv-iv
  • Dedication
    pp v-vi
  • Contents
    pp vii-vii
  • Figures
    pp viii-ix
  • Tables
    pp x-x
  • Preface and Acknowledgments
    pp xi-xiv
  • Note on Toponyms, Gender, and Calendar
    pp xv-xvi
  • Introduction
    pp 1-22
  • Japan, the Kuroshio, and the Creation of a Pacific World
  • 1 - The Geophysics of Japan’s Terraqueous Metabolism
    pp 23-51
  • 2 - Maritime Practice and Virtual Geography
    pp 52-75
  • 3 - The Invention of Japan’s Pacific
    pp 76-109
  • 4 - Harbingers of Empire
    pp 110-134
  • 5 - Naval Technology and the Geopolitics of the Kuroshio Highway
    pp 135-161
  • 6 - Tokugawa Colonialism and the Symbolism of Modern Statehood
    pp 162-192
  • 7 - Science, State, and Piracy in the Making of an Imperial Frontier
    pp 193-217
  • 8 - South Sea Romanticism and the Emergence of Frontier Tycoons
    pp 218-237
  • Epilogue
    pp 238-251
  • The Unending Kuroshio Frontier
  • Bibliography
    pp 252-286
  • Index
    pp 287-302

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