No.192 Seminar : “Tropical Ray Skins for the Japanese Market: Following the Trade Routes from India in the Early Modern Period”
  • Ikuko WADA (Hakubi 5th batch, Institute for Research in Humanities, Assistant Professor / Associate Professor, Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Okayama University)
  • 2021/03/09 4:30pm
  • Zoom (Closed)
  • Japanese (some English)

Summary

Since ancient times, South Asia has been connected to the surrounding regions by both land and sea trade routes, and has supplied a wide variety of goods to various regions. Some of such traded goods, which may not have had a significant importance economically, had a cultural impact on a particular region. In this seminar, I will focus on ray skins from South Asian waters regarded as a kind of quality material for sword hilts in the early modern Japan. Here I will examine how tropical ray skins were imported from overseas to Tokugawa Japan and reconsider intra-regional relations in Asia from a new global perspective.


Commentators

  • Katsura KOISHI (Hakubi 3th batch, Institute for Research in Humanities, Assistant Professor / Professor, School of Humanities, Kwansei Gakuin University)

Opening talk
My research project selected for JST FOREST program

  • Speaker:Tomohiko TAKEI (Hakubi 8th batch, Graduate School of Medicine, Associate Professor)
  • Presentation Language:English/Japanese

Summary

I’m going to introduce my research project that was selected for JST FOREST program

Related Researchers

Ikuko WADA