Printing Technologies and Book Production in Seventeenth-Century Japan
This Element first sets the history of printing in Japan in its East Asian context, showing how developments in China, Korea and elsewhere had an impact upon Japan. It then undertakes a re-examination of printing in seventeenth-century Japan and in particular explores the reasons why Japanese printers abandoned typography less than fifty years after it was introduced. This is a question that has often been posed but never satisfactorily answered, but this Element takes a new approach, focusing on two popular medical texts that were first printed typographically and then xylographically. The argument presented here is that the glosses relied upon by Japanese readers could be much more easily be provided when printing xylographically: since from the early seventeenth century onwards printed books customarily included glosses for the convenience of readers, this was surely the reason for the abandonment of typography.
Reviews & endorsements
‘In fewer than eighty pages, Kornicki provides a remarkable overview of printing in seventeenth-century Japan and accounts for the historical puzzle of the reversion from typography to xylography. As an added bonus, the first two chapters provide a concise overview of the current scholarly understanding of the origins and development of printing in East Asia as a whole. That the result is required reading for scholars of book history almost goes without saying, but the manageable size of the monograph and the commendable decision to offer it as a part of the Cambridge Elements series subscribed to by many libraries make it equally suitable for ready inclusion in undergraduate and graduate syllabi.’ William D. Fleming, Journal of the American Society for Premodern Asia
Product details
- Published: January 2025
- Format: Paperback
- ISBN: 9781009495516
- Length: 100 pages
- Dimensions: 177 × 125 × 6 mm
- Weight: 0.11kg
- Availability: Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The East Asian Invention and Development of Typography
- 3. The Introduction of Typography to Japan
- 4. The Decline of Typography in Japan
- 5. Explaining the Decline of Typography
- 6. Two Early Seventeenth-Century Medical Texts
- 7. Takagi Takaaki's argument
- 8. Conclusion.
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