The samurai and the European question
Abstrakt
The article analyses the origins of the pictures in C.K. Norwid’s Album Orbis: Japanese monks from Vol. I and a Japanese archer from Vol. III. Norwid borrowed the illustrations from Aimé Humbert’s book Le Japon illustré; these illustrations originated as photographs by Felice Beato, transformed first into graphics printed in books and in press articles, and later cut-out or re-drawn by Norwid and placed in an entirely new illustrative and narrative context within his Album. Such multi-stage borrowing (photography-graphic-drawing) required many modifications; this process reflected the indirect and multi-stage transfer of knowledge between Japan and Europe in the 19th century and this knowledge exchange was taking place in the context of European, including French, colonial expansion in Asia. The fact that Norwid placed the Japanese archer among illustrations from early medieval Europe may suggest that he wanted to create a parallel between the actions of the Carolingian dynasty in relation to the papacy and the actions undertaken by the first Minamoto shoguns with regard to the Japanese emperor, as the latter were described by A. Humbert.
Bibliografia
Borowiec A., “Album Orbis” Cypriana Norwida – jako księga sztukmistrza, Gdańsk 2016.
Brockey L.M., Journey to the East: the Jesuit mission to China, 1579-1724, Cambridge, Mass. 2007.
Burke P., Eyewitnessing: the uses of images as historical evidence, Ithaca–New York 2001.
Chlebowski P., Romantyczna silva rerum. O Norwidowym “Albumie Orbis”, Lublin 2009.
Gartlan L., Felice, Beato, [in:] Encyclopedia of nineteenth-century photography, ed. J. Hannavy, New York 2008.
Hacker A., Wakeman F., China Illustrated: Western Views of the Middle Kingdom, New York 2012.
Hall J., The Cambridge History of Japan, vol. IV, Cambridge 2006.
Hanes W.T. i Sanello F., Opium Wars: The Addiction of One Empire and the Corruption of Another, Naperville 2002.
HightE.M., The Many Lives of Beato’s «beauties», [in:] Colonialist Photography: Imag(in)ing Race and Place, eds. E.M. Hight, G.D. Sampson, London 2005.
HumbertA., Le Japon illustré, vols. I-II, Paris 1870.
Norwid C., Pisma wszystkie. Aneksy, vol. XI, ed. J.W. Gomulicki, Warszawa 1976.
Tubielewicz J., Historia Japonii, Wrocław 1984.
Copyright (c) 2018 Studia Norwidiana
Utwór dostępny jest na licencji Creative Commons Uznanie autorstwa – Użycie niekomercyjne – Bez utworów zależnych 4.0 Międzynarodowe.