This book introduces English-speaking audiences to tsuji, who were interpreters in different contexts in Japan and then the Ryukyu Kingdom from the late 16th to the mid-19th century. It comprises seven historical case studies on tsuji in which contributors adopt a context-oriented approach. They aim to explore the function of these interpreters in communication with other cultures in different languages, including Japanese, Dutch, Chinese, Korean, Ryukyuan, English, Russian and Ainu. Each chapter elucidates the tsuji and the surrounding social, political and economic conditions. The book will be of interest to students and scholars of translation and interpreting, but also readers interested in the early modern history of interpreting and cultural exchange. It will similarly appeal to those interested in the Japanese language, but with limited access to books written in Japanese.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1: Introduction (Miki Sato and Mino Saito). - Chapter 2: The Role of Jesuit Missionary João Rodrigues
Tçuzu
(1561? -1634?): Interpreter, Trade Liaison, and Linguist in the Late 16
th
and Early 17
th
Centuries (Etsuko Nanjo). - Chapter 3:
Oranda
-
ts ji
(Japanese-Dutch Interpreters) in the 18
th
Century: The Case of YOSHIO K zaemon (K gy ) (Miyuki Tanaka). - Chapter 4: Reconsidering the Role of Nagasaki
T -ts ji
(Japanese-Chinese Interpreters) in the History of Interpreting Between Japan and China (Yukari Hiratsuka). - Chapter 5: Japanese-Korean
ts ji
and AMENOMORI H sh in the 18
th
Century (Hiroko Furukawa). - Chapter 6: Ryukyuan-Chinese
ts ji
as an Intermediary in the 17
th
and 18
th
Centuries (Mino Saito). - Chapter 7: The Arrival of Western Ships and English Language Interpreters in Ryukyu During the 19
th
Century: The Case of ITARASHIKI Ch ch (Mutsuko Tsuboi). - Chapter 8:
Ezo-ts ji
(Japanese-Ainu Interpreters in the Late 18
th
and Early 19
th
Century: The Case of UEHARA Kumajir (Miki Sato). - Chapter 9: The Marginality of Otokichi, a Castaway Turned Interpreter: Into the Unknown Interpreter History in Early-Modern Japan (Mikako Naganuma).