Description
Table of Contents
Note on Japanese Names and Terms Introduction Part I: The Bakumatsu Network and the First Japanese Students 1 Guido F. Verbeck: Missionary, Teacher and Advisor in Bakumatsu-Meiji Japan James M. Hommes 2 Envisioning a New Japan: Matsudaira Shungaku, Yokoi Shonan, and the Bakumatsu Network at the Dawn of the Rutgers-Japan Connection Haruko Wakabayashi with Fuji Takagi 3 Katsu Kaishu as a Shadow Founder of the Japanese Ryugakusei Community in New Brunswick: Katsu Koroku, Takagi Saburo, and Tomita Tetsunosuke Noriko Ochiai and Yukako Otori Part II: The Japanese Students in New Brunswick and Beyond 4 The Japanese Students in New Brunswick and Beyond: A Comparative Study of New Brunswick and Boston as a Hub for Japanese Ryugakusei Satoshi Shiozaki 5 Rutgers in the Nineteenth Century Fernanda Perrone 6 Rev. Edward T. Corwin and the Japanese Students at the Hillsborough Reformed Church at Millstone Haruko Wakabayashi Part III: The American Teachers in Japan: Griffis, Wyckoff, and Clark 7 "Well of Blessing": Griffis in Fukui Fernanda Perrone 8 Edward Warren Clark in Shizuoka 1871-1873 A. Hamish Ion 9 Fukui's Role in the Career of William Elliot Griffis Joseph M. Henning Part IV: The Rutgers-Japan Network in Action: The Iwakura Mission and Educational Reform in Japan 10 The Satsuma-Rutgers Connection During the Early Meiji Era John E. Van Sant 11 The Rutgers Network and the Iwakura Mission: Guido F. Verbeck and Hatakeyama Yoshinari Haruko Wakabayashi 12 David Murray's Influence on Japanese Education Benjamin Duke / Edited by Fernanda Perrone Part V: Reformed Church Missionaries and Early Christian Education 13 James H. Ballagh: The First Rutgers Graduate in Japan Koji Nakajima 14 Rutgers Missionaries and Meiji Gakuin Naoto Tsuji 15 The Contributions of Rutgers and the Reformed Church in America to Women's Education in Modern Japan Rui Kohiyama Epilogue-Griffis's Legacies: Rutgers and Fukui Ryuhei Hosoya Acknowledgements Notes on Contributors Index
About the Author
Haruko Wakabayashi is an associate teaching professor in the Department of Asian Languages and Cultures at Rutgers-New Brunswick. She is the author of The Seven Tengu Scrolls: Evil and the Rhetoric of Legitimacy in Medieval Japanese Buddhism. Fernanda Perrone is the Archivist and Head of the Exhibitions Program and Curator of the William Elliot Griffis Collection, Special Collections/University Archives at Rutgers University. She is the co-author of The Douglass Century: The Transformation of the Women's College at Rutgers (Rutgers University Press).

