search for books and compare prices
journalists japan biography matches 3 work(s)
displaying 1 to 3 | at end
show results in order: alphabetically | oldest to newest | newest to oldest
Cover for 9780691046747 Cover for 9780691643281 Cover for 9780691615936 Cover for 9780321078025 Cover for 9780742526204 Cover for 9780742526211
cover image for 9780691643281
Product Description: Tokutomi Soho was one of modern Japan's most prolific, most popular, and most influential journalists and social critics. Through a comprehensive and balanced biography of this important public figure, John Pierson examines the interaction of a man and his time...read more

Hardcover:

9780691643281 | Princeton Univ Pr, April 19, 2016, cover price $165.00 | About this edition: Tokutomi Soho was one of modern Japan's most prolific, most popular, and most influential journalists and social critics.
9780691046747 | Princeton Univ Pr, December 1, 1980, cover price $59.50 | About this edition: Tokutomi Soho was one of modern Japan's most prolific, most popular, and most influential journalists and social critics.

Paperback:

9780691615936, titled "Tokutomi Soho, 1863-1957: A Journalist for Modern Japan" | Princeton Univ Pr, July 14, 2014, cover price $66.00 | About this edition: Tokutomi Soho was one of modern Japan's most prolific, most popular, and most influential journalists and social critics.

cover image for 9780742526211
This unique book introduces nineteenth-century Japan through the compelling life story of Boston journalist Edward H. House (1836-1901), America's first regular correspondent in Japan. House's accomplishments were breathtaking in variety: shaping the reputations of John Brown and Mark Twain, influencing American attitudes toward Asia, persuading Congress to return a massive indemnity to Japan, editing Tokyo's earliest English-language newspaper (Tokio Times), constructing a powerful case against imperialism, and introducing Western orchestral music to Japan. House's experiences also illustrated many of the era's key themes: Japan's use of public relations as a diplomatic tool, the contentious relations of the expatriate community, the role foreign advisors played in Japan's drive toward modernity, and the complicated nature of U.S.-Japan relations. The book captures the human drama of a special breed of early journalist. It recounts the bohemianism that made House and his friends (e.g., Walt Whitman, Artemus Ward) notorious. It narrates his tender, tortured relationship with Aoki Koto, a girl he adopted when she was on the verge of suicide. It shows a courageous struggle with gout, including 20 years in a wheelchair given to him by the powerful Okuma Shigenobu. And it details a deep friendship with Mark Twain, which eventually was destroyed by a dispute over The Prince and the Pauper. Twain's unpublished 50-page manuscript on the experience, Concerning the Scoundrel E. H. House, is introduced here for the first time. Meticulously researched, the book draws on House's voluminous writings and on hundreds of letters between House and major figures in both America and Japan, including Mark Twain, U.S. Grant, John Russell Young, Edmund Clarence Stedman, Okuma Shigenobu, and Inoue Kaoru. With its lively, accessible prose and seamless interweaving of the life of House with the history of the Meiji era, this book will be welcomed by students, scholars, and general readers interested in modern Japanese history and in America's nineteenth-century foreign relations.

Hardcover:

9780742526204 | Rowman & Littlefield Pub Inc, May 1, 2003, cover price $90.00 | About this edition: This unique book introduces nineteenth-century Japan through the compelling life story of Boston journalist Edward H.

Paperback:

9780742526211 | Rowman & Littlefield Pub Inc, June 1, 2003, cover price $36.00

displaying 1 to 3 | at end