A Flow of Christian Images from the Shanghai Jesuits to the Paris Foreign Missions in Japan: Imitation, Alteration, and Returning to the Roots

IF 0.3 Q2 HISTORY
Nanyan Guo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The Jesuit Adolphe Vasseur created more than 160 woodblock prints at the orphanage of T’ou-se-we in Shanghai, China, combining Western images of biblical stories with traditional Chinese styles and symbols, aiming to help familiarize the Chinese people with Christian concepts. Vasseur’s images were adopted and transformed through lithographic publications and woodblock prints by the Paris Foreign Missions (mep) in Japan from the 1860s to the 1870s under Fr. Marc Marie de Rotz (1840–1914). Focusing on ten woodblock prints, often referred to as the “De Rotz Prints,” which were made based on Vasseur’s images and altered by adding Japanese symbols, this paper will show how Vasseur’s images were modified from a Chinese to Japanese context, primarily by adapting to the situation of Japanese Christians, who were emerging from more than two centuries of persecution and underground worship. This article is part of the special issue of the Journal of Jesuit Studies, “Jesuits in Modern Far East,” guest edited by Steven Pieragastini.
从上海耶稣会士到巴黎驻日使团的基督教形象之流:模仿、改变与归根
耶稣会士阿道夫·瓦塞尔(Adolphe Vasseur)在中国上海的汤氏孤儿院创作了160多幅木版画,将西方圣经故事图像与中国传统风格和符号相结合,旨在帮助中国人熟悉基督教概念。19世纪60年代至19世纪70年代,在马克·玛丽·德·罗茨神父(1840–1914)的领导下,驻日本的巴黎外交使团(mep)通过平版印刷品和木版印刷品采用并改造了瓦塞尔的图像。本文以十幅木版印刷品为中心,通常被称为“德罗茨版画”,这些版画是根据瓦塞尔的图像制作的,并通过添加日本符号进行了修改,他们是从两个多世纪的迫害和地下崇拜中走出来的。这篇文章是《耶稣会研究杂志》特刊“现代远东的耶稣会士”的一部分,由Steven Pieragastini客座编辑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
53
期刊介绍: This is a full Open Access journal. All articles are available for free from the moment of publication and authors do not pay an article publication charge. The Journal of Jesuit Studies (JJS) is a peer-reviewed quarterly journal dedicated to the study of Jesuit history from the sixteenth to the twenty-first century. It welcomes articles on all aspects of the Jesuit past and present including, but not limited to, the Jesuit role in the arts and sciences, theology, philosophy, mission, literature, and interreligious/inter-cultural encounters. In its themed issues the JJS highlights studies with a given topical, chronological or geographical focus. In addition there are two open-topic issues per year. The journal publishes a significant number of book reviews as well. One of the key tasks of the JJS is to relate episodes in Jesuit history, particularly those which have suffered from scholarly neglect, to broader trends in global history over the past five centuries. The journal also aims to bring the highest quality non-Anglophone scholarship to an English-speaking audience by means of translated original articles.
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