Footprints Ser.: In The Eye Of The Wind : A Travel Memoir Of Prewar Japan by Martin Baenninger and Ron Baenninger (2009, Hardcover)

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About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherMcGill-Queen's University Press
ISBN-100773534970
ISBN-139780773534971
eBay Product ID (ePID)71664631

Product Key Features

Number of Pages208 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameIn the Eye of the Wind : a Travel Memoir of Prewar Japan
SubjectGeneral, Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Military
Publication Year2009
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaSocial Science, Biography & Autobiography, History
AuthorMartin Baenninger, Ron Baenninger
SeriesFootprints Ser.
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height0.6 in
Item Weight23.5 Oz
Item Length9.8 in
Item Width5.9 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceCollege Audience
Reviews"An engaging attempt to simultaneously retain the best of several traditionally different approaches in historical biogeography, incorporating concepts and data from each into a new perspective on Croizat's vision of Earth and life evolving together."--Brett R. Riddle, University of Nevada, Las Vegas"A fascinating story, well-told and engaging, about a world now receding into the distance." Robert Calder, University of Saskatchewan, With its compelling tales of world travel and its informative account of the internment of foreign nationals in wartime Japan, In the Eye of the Wind will appeal equally to general readers interested in travel memoirs, Japan, treaty ports, and personal e|9780773534971|, "The saga of the Baenningers' dramatic departure from Japan and their maritime trek around the world to finally reach Canada in 1942 is completely absorbing." Joseph Kess, Centre for Asia-Pacific Initiative, University of Victoria "A fascinating story, well-told and engaging, about a world now receding into the distance." Robert Calder, University of Saskatchewan, "A fascinating story, well-told and engaging, about a world now receding into the distance." Robert Calder, University of Saskatchewan, "With its compelling tales of world travel and its informative account of the internment of foreign nationals in wartime Japan, In the Eye of the Wind will appeal equally to general readers interested in travel memoirs, Japan, treaty ports, and personal experiences of colonialism and war." Tristan R. Grunow, University of Oregon, "The saga of the Baenningers' dramatic departure from Japan and their maritime trek around the world to finally reach Canada in 1942 is completely absorbing." Joseph Kess, Centre for Asia-Pacific Initiative, University of Victoria
Series Volume Number10
IllustratedYes
SynopsisThe early married life of foreign nationals in Japan in the years leading up to the Second World War., Yokohama, a quiet fishing village when Commodore Matthew Perry arrived with his gunboat diplomacy in the mid-1800s, was quickly transformed into a bustling port for international trade. The change brought affluent foreigners to the city but also mobilized Japanese nationalist hostilities. It was in this setting that Ron and Martin Baenninger's Canadian mother and Swiss father met in 1933. Relying on Ron's early memories, their mother's diary, and the acute memory of their father, who lived to be over one hundred, the Baenningers recount the initial years of their parents' marriage and provide glimpses into relations between Japan and the West from the turn of the century to the onset of the Second World War. In their earliest years together the young couple enjoyed a rich social life, travelling freely between Canada, Switzerland, and Japan, although aware of the political turmoil slowing unfolding around them. The outbreak of the war between Japan and the United States and allied powers brought their privileged lifestyle to an end. In August 1942 they escaped internment with their young son aboard the Kamakura Maru - one of the many exchange ships assigned to bring foreign nationals home and the last evacuation vessel from Japan - and negotiated their way through war-torn areas to reach Canada four months later. In the Eye of the Wind - both a deeply personal account of one family and a unique perspective on the politically turbulent atmosphere of pre-war Japan - will interest anyone seeking to learn more about a tumultuous period in an extraordinary place.
LC Classification NumberDS822.4
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