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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Yulia FrumerPublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press ISBN: 9780226516448ISBN 10: 022651644 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 25 January 2018 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews"""I wish the book had existed twenty years ago... Frumer is intent on bringing early modern Japan out of the shadow of the modern period, a task that remains warranted and needed... Frumer's monograph is an excellent early step in understanding time reckoning in Japan prior to the modern period.""-- ""Monumenta Nipponica"" ""Yulia Frumer's monograph is a welcome addition to the English-language scholarship on timekeeping traditions and material practices in Tokugawa Japan (1600-1868)...Frumer demonstrates a sophisticated understanding of the cultural valences of measuring and embodying time and focuses on how foreign technology - European and hence ""Western"" and ""foreign"" - was adapted and acculturated to meet the specific needs of individuals and society in the Tokugawa period.""-- ""Nuncius"" ""A superb study that is narrow in focus but broad in its implications. . . . This book is a remarkable achievement. The thesis is original and compelling, and Frumer deftly integrates an analysis of technological diffusion with a discussion of time as a social construct. She connects detailed explorations of clock mechanisms and astronomical calculations with insights into lived experience. This is a genuine contribution to our understanding of early modern and Meiji Japan.""-- ""American Historical Review"" ""While it provides an exceptionally rich and focused case study grounded in careful research with Japanese documents and material objects, Frumer's book also offers a critical analysis of what it is that we're doing when we study the relationship between societies and technologies that has potentially far-reaching consequences well beyond the history of Japan.""-- ""New Books Network"" ""Setting out to explore the genesis of astronomical time in Japan's Tokugawa period (1600-1868), Yulia Frumer's Making Time: Astronomical Time Measurement in Tokugawa Japan succeeds brilliantly in filling a gap in the world history of time and science for an English-speaking audience.""-- ""Kronoscope"" ""Frumer brings life to how intellectuals and craftsmen thought about time and timekeeping. Well re-searched and convincingly argued, Making Time is a significant contribution to the social and technological histories of early modern Japan. It is a welcome addition that will likely inspire further research on the subject.""-- ""Technology and Culture"" ""Brace yourself for a most thought-provoking journey through time in premodern Japan. This book forces historians of science and technology to think more deeply about what they think they already know about modernity and time practices before and while the global system of commerce and exchange tightened its grip in the nineteenth century. Historically brilliant and beautifully written, Frumer unfolds how and why astronomical time-space relationships came to matter in Tokugawa and Meiji scientific minds and public life. I literally felt the ambiguities of time come to life in her rich account, in relative and absolute terms. One emerges from reading it inspired and positively provoked, realizing the lived truth of Einstein's theory: time indeed flows at different rates for different systems.""--Dagmar Schäfer, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin ""Well-researched and original in its interpretation, this history of timekeeping in early modern Japan introduces an aspect of Japanese culture and knowledge production that has been only scantly covered in traditional scholarship. Making Time is a major, outstanding contribution to both East Asian cultural history and the history of science.""--Federico Marcon, Princeton University ""Making superb use of the material evidence, Frumer undertakes a procedure analogous to the reverse-engineering practiced by Tokugawa clockmakers themselves, unpicking the logic behind puzzling pieces of an alien material culture. . . . Frumer's substantive claims are always compelling, and the details she unearths are of endless interest. . . . [Her] penetrating analysis of astronomical time illuminates one crucial element of that complex time-scape without beginning to exhaust it. This reviewer, for one, looks forward to seeing what new questions it will prompt--and what will issue next from the talented author of Making Time.""-- ""The Journal of Japanese Studies"" ""Will fascinate readers . . . . Making Time is the most comprehensive treatment of Japanese timekeeping to date, but it is not a specialized book for horologists interested in detailed information about clock mechanisms and makers. Frumer's text is addressed to historians of science, technology, and Japanese culture. She deftly shows that technology is not just about practical needs; it is shaped by a society's values and activities. . . . Frumer's analysis has reach far beyond Japan.""-- ""Physics Today"" ""Yulia Frumer is an engaging narrator. . . . [whose] sophisticated analyses add valuable and original insight into the early development of astronomical sciences in Japan. . . . Making Time is pioneering in employing a cultural historical approach to demonstrate how Japanese astronomers interpreted and attached meanings to Western ideas, texts, clocks, instruments, and other materials. . . . The book is well furnished with clear color photographs of Japanese clocks as well as many black-and-white illustrations that might not only attract the reader but also help support Frumer's analysis.""-- ""Isis""" A superb study that is narrow in focus but broad in its implications. . . . This book is a remarkable achievement. The thesis is original and compelling, and Frumer deftly integrates an analysis of technological diffusion with a discussion of time as a social construct. She connects detailed explorations of clock mechanisms and astronomical calculations with insights into lived experience. This is a genuine contribution to our understanding of early modern and Meiji Japan. -- American Historical Review I wish the book had existed twenty years ago . . . . Frumer is intent on bringing early modern Japan out of the shadow of the modern period, a task that remains warranted and needed. . . . Frumer's monograph is an excellent early step in understanding time reckoning in Japan prior to the modern period. -- Monumenta Nipponica While it provides an exceptionally rich and focused case study grounded in careful research with Japanese documents and material objects, Frumer's book also offers a critical analysis of what it is that we're doing when we study the relationship between societies and technologies that has potentially far-reaching consequences well beyond the history of Japan. -- New Books Network Yulia Frumer is an engaging narrator. . . . [whose] sophisticated analyses add valuable and original insight into the early development of astronomical sciences in Japan. . . . Making Time is pioneering in employing a cultural historical approach to demonstrate how Japanese astronomers interpreted and attached meanings to Western ideas, texts, clocks, instruments, and other materials. . . . The book is well furnished with clear color photographs of Japanese clocks as well as many black-and-white illustrations that might not only attract the reader but also help support Frumer's analysis. -- Isis Will fascinate readers . . . . Making Time is the most comprehensive treatment of Japanese timekeeping to date, but it is not a specialized book for horologists interested in detailed information about clock mechanisms and makers. Frumer's text is addressed to historians of science, technology, and Japanese culture. She deftly shows that technology is not just about practical needs; it is shaped by a society's values and activities. . . . Frumer's analysis has reach far beyond Japan. -- Physics Today Well-researched and original in its interpretation, this history of timekeeping in early modern Japan introduces an aspect of Japanese culture and knowledge production that has been only scantly covered in traditional scholarship. Making Time is a major, outstanding contribution to both East Asian cultural history and the history of science. --Federico Marcon, Princeton University Monumenta Nipponica Making superb use of the material evidence, Frumer undertakes a procedure analogous to the reverse-engineering practiced by Tokugawa clockmakers themselves, unpicking the logic behind puzzling pieces of an alien material culture. . . . Frumer's substantive claims are always compelling, and the details she unearths are of endless interest. . . . [Her] penetrating analysis of astronomical time illuminates one crucial element of that complex time-scape without beginning to exhaust it. This reviewer, for one, looks forward to seeing what new questions it will prompt--and what will issue next from the talented author of Making Time. -- The Journal of Japanese Studies Brace yourself for a most thought-provoking journey through time in premodern Japan. This book forces historians of science and technology to think more deeply about what they think they already know about modernity and time practices before and while the global system of commerce and exchange tightened its grip in the nineteenth century. Historically brilliant and beautifully written, Frumer unfolds how and why astronomical time-space relationships came to matter in Tokugawa and Meiji scientific minds and public life. I literally felt the ambiguities of time come to life in her rich account, in relative and absolute terms. One emerges from reading it inspired and positively provoked, realizing the lived truth of Einstein's theory: time indeed flows at different rates for different systems. --Dagmar Schafer, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin Monumenta Nipponica Well-researched and original in its interpretation, this history of timekeeping in early modern Japan introduces an aspect of Japanese culture and knowledge production that has been only scantly covered in traditional scholarship. Making Time is a major, outstanding contribution to both East Asian cultural history and the history of science. --Federico Marcon, Princeton University Brace yourself for a most thought-provoking journey through time in premodern Japan. This book forces historians of science and technology to think more deeply about what they think they already know about modernity and time practices before and while the global system of commerce and exchange tightened its grip in the nineteenth century. Historically brilliant and beautifully written, Frumer unfolds how and why astronomical time-space relationships came to matter in Tokugawa and Meiji scientific minds and public life. I literally felt the ambiguities of time come to life in her rich account, in relative and absolute terms. One emerges from reading it inspired and positively provoked, realizing the lived truth of Einstein's theory: time indeed flows at different rates for different systems. --Dagmar Schafer, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin Brace yourself for a most thought-provoking journey through time in premodern Japan. This book forces historians of science and technology to think more deeply about what they think they already know about modernity and time practices before and while the global system of commerce and exchange tightened its grip in the nineteenth century. Historically brilliant and beautifully written, Frumer unfolds how and why astronomical time-space relationships came to matter in Tokugawa and Meiji scientific minds and public life. I literally felt the ambiguities of time come to life in her rich account, in relative and absolute terms. One emerges from reading it inspired and positively provoked, realizing the lived truth of Einstein's theory: time indeed flows at different rates for different systems. --Dagmar Sch fer, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin Well-researched and original in its interpretation, this history of timekeeping in early modern Japan introduces an aspect of Japanese culture and knowledge production that has been only scantly covered in traditional scholarship. Making Time is a major, outstanding contribution to both East Asian cultural history and the history of science. --Federico Marcon, Princeton University Author InformationYulia Frumer is the Bo Jung and Soon Young Kim Assistant Professor of East Asian Science and Technology in the Department of History of Science and Technology, Johns Hopkins University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |