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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An American in Edo, June 23, 2007
This review is from: Longfellow's Tattoos: Tourism, Collecting, and Japan (Paperback)
This is one of the most fascinating stories I have ever read. Politically correct academics have succeeded in erasing Longfellow from the American canon, replacing him and his contemporaries with names you've never heard and will never know how to pronounce. Perhaps this bit of exotica if not to say erotica will give life back to this former pillar of American culture. It is the son, not the sage of Cambridge whom Professor Guth has chosen as her subject. But what a character he is. Longfellow Jr. had very little going for himself besides boredom and a nearly limitless bank account, so he went on an extended grand tour of the Orient, setting himself up in a Japanese harem, stocked like a koi pond which nubile Japanese maidens. Besides an addiction to Asian flesh, young Longfellow seems to have keyed into that great American pastime known as shopping with the result that he brought a warehouse full of souvenires back to fill Boston's museums and the mansions of his father's aristocratic friends. Any way you look at it, this story has legs. It's a miracle Hollywood hasn't grabbed hold of it. Stay tuned.
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A cultural expose of Japan in the 19th century, February 7, 2005
This review is from: Longfellow's Tattoos: Tourism, Collecting, and Japan (Paperback)
Charles Longfellow was the son of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Charles visited Japan in the 1870s intending a brief visit, and stayed for two years, returning to Boston with photos and elaborate tattoos he had 'collected' on his body. But Christine M.E. Guth's Longfellow's Tattoos: Tourism, Collecting, And Japan is not so much a survey of collectible items nor even tattoo history, as a cultural expose of Japan in the 19th century travel world. Chapters survey the state and nature of Japanese culture in the world of the times, using art and curios as a focal point.
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Longfellow's Tattoos: Tourism, Collecting, and Japan
Longfellow's Tattoos: Tourism, Collecting, and Japan by Christine M. E. Guth (Paperback - Sept. 2004)
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