Unbeaten Tracks in Japan: Volume 1
An Account of Travels in the Interior, Including Visits to the Aborigines of Yezo and the Shrines of Nikkô and Isé
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:24th Jun '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Isabella Bird's fascinating observational anecdotes of nineteenth-century Japan. Volume 1 recounts first impressions and native ways of life.
This book by Isabella Bird was created from the letters that she wrote to her sister and others. The first volume records the details of the day-to-day life of the Japanese among whom she lived, as well as her first impressions and experiences as an Englishwoman travelling alone.Isabella Bird's Unbeaten Tracks in Japan was published in 1880 and recounts her travels in the Far East from 1876. Bird was recommended an open-air life from an early age as a cure for her physical and nervous difficulties. She toured the United States and Canada, New Zealand, Australia and the Sandwich Islands, before travelling to the Far East in order to strengthen herself to marry Dr John Bishop and live in Edinburgh. Created out of the letters Bird wrote home, primarily to her sister, Volume 1 recounts her experiences as a solo woman traveller living among the Japanese in Yokohama and Niigata. It includes descriptions of clothing, food and drink, education, housing, theatre, women's lifestyles, religion, plant life, medicine, shopping and other day-to-day activities, as well as the vicissitudes and excitement of the conditions and process of travelling, including by boat and pack-horse.
ISBN: 9781108014625
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 24mm
Weight: 550g
432 pages