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Friendly Connections

Philadelphia Quakers and Japan since the Late Nineteenth Century

Friendly Connections

Philadelphia Quakers and Japan since the Late Nineteenth Century

This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Hardback

£96.00

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN: 9781793623331
Number of Pages: 372
Published: 08/01/2024
Width: 16.1 cm
Height: 23.7 cm
Friendly Connections: Philadelphia Quakers and Japan since the Late Nineteenth Century discloses the history of relations among members of the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers, of Philadelphia and Japanese intellectuals, educators, and activists. In this book, Japanese and North American experts demonstrate that education, women’s rights, interracial equality, politics, disaster relief, reform, and peace efforts have all benefited. Seventeen chapters detail this underappreciated history. Throughout the modern era, these ties, often between women, have transformed efforts for peace, equality, and women’s rights in Japan and the United States. With a focus on “women’s work for women,” and revelations about supportive British Quakers, this book uncovers networks that sustained Japan-America ties for a century and a half.

Part 1. Beginnings: “The Simple Fact of Our Being Friends”

Chapter 1: Early Quaker Missionary Activity and Japan
Thomas D. Hamm
Chapter 2: Transpacific Quaker Denominationalism: Quakerism from Philadelphia to Tokyo
Tetsuko Toda
Chapter 3: The Japan Peace Society and the British and American Quakers Who Supported It
Mitsuhiro Sakaguchi

Part 2. Partnerships: “More than the Courage to Despair”

Chapter 4: The Faith Life of Nitobe Inazo: A Legacy of Philadelphia Quakerism
Thomas W. Burkman
Chapter 5: The Nitobes: A Quaker International Marriage
Steven Elkinton and Sharlie Conroy Ushioda
Chapter 6: Anna C. Hartshorne and Her Mission in Japan
Mieko Kojima
Chapter 7: “Toward Friendship with Japan”: The American Friends Service Committee and Educational Diplomacy in the 1920s,
Allan W. Austin

Part 3. Tides: “If You Can Stay, Do Stay”

Chapter 8: Edith Forsythe Sharpless in Wartime Japan, 1939–1943
Tetsuko Toda
Chapter 9: Esther Biddle Rhoads and Friends School in Tokyo
Mitsuo Otsu, translated by Louisa Hatanaka and Kazumi Teune
Chapter 10: The Encounter with Non-Pastoral Quakerism
Tetsuko Toda

Part 4. Occupations: “For Mutual Helpfulness”

Chapter 11: Elizabeth Gray Vining: A Philadelphia Quaker and the Education of the Japanese Imperial Crown Prince
Paul B. Reagan
Chapter 12: The Public Speeches of Elizabeth Gray Vining in Japan and the United States
Cynthia L. Daugherty
Chapter 13: Friends and the LARA Postwar Relief Efforts to Japan
Masako Iino
Chapter 14: Quaker Connections with Women’s Educational Leadership in Japan
Tetsuko Toda

Part 5. Futures: Archives “Bearing Witness”

Chapter 15: Philadelphia Quakers and Japan: Archival Sources in the Collections at Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College
Susanna Koethe Morikawa
Chapter 16: Quakers and Japan: Archival and Manuscript Materials at Haverford College
Sarah M. Horowitz
Chapter 17: A Brief History of American Friends Service Committee Work on Behalf of Japan and the Japanese People
Donald Davis

Linda H. Chance, Paul B. Reagan, Tetsuko Toda

Linda H. Chance is associate professor of Japanese studies in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Pennsylvania.
Paul B. Reagan is an independent scholar and historian of modern Japan and international relations.
Tetsuko Toda is a project researcher of Quaker history in Japan at Tsuda University.