This important collection addresses aspects of Japanese human and
material interactions in East Asia from the late eleventh through the
late sixteenth centuries, a period coincident with Japan's late
classical and medieval eras. The collection broadens our understanding
of Japanese history, by departing from a traditional focus on Japanese
history as a phenomenon essentially limited to the Japanese archipelago,
and expands the horizons of that history to encompass the ubiquity of
overseas contacts and the constant circulation of people, experiences,
and objects. Each chapter provides a different perspective on the
interactions--travel, trade, texts, religion, poetry, medicine, and
art--rippling through Japanese society and across the waters that joined
Japan and the continent.