Listen "Jakobina Arch - Coastal Shipping of Tokugawa Japan"
Episode Synopsis
Professor Jakobina Arch (Whitman College, Walla Walla, Washington) discusses her research into coastal shipping of Tokugawa Japan (17th century -19th century), and accounts of shipwrecks' survivors as insights on the religious world of sailors. Unraveling how Western and Meiji sources have spoken disparagingly of the designs of the 'bezaisen' or coastal ships of the Tokugawa period, Arch proffers compelling evidence to point out the construction of the 'bezaisen' stemmed from specific environmental exigencies -- they were designed to easily navigate the shallow waters near the coast of Japan. Far from being an unchanging maritime vessel, Arch argues the 'bezaisen' underwent significant innovations during the Tokugawa period, responding to market forces and adapting to better understandings of the coastal environment of Japan. Delving into surviving oral narratives of sailors cast away by shipwrecks, Arch also highlights how the religious world of Japanese sailors caught in storms and/or shipwrecks drew upon a medley of Buddhist and Shinto religious practices to interact with the oceanic and terrestrial environments of Japan. She concludes that accounts of shipwrecks' survivors also form an alternative archive to researching weather and climatic patterns around the Sea of Japan in the early modern period.
For more on Prof. Arch’s publications, see her academic bio: https://www.whitman.edu/academics/majors-and-minors/history/history-faculty/jakobina-k-arch
This podcast was produced with the help of Renée Manderville (Project Manager, IOWC), Archisman Chaudhuri and Philip Gooding (both postdoctoral fellows, IOWC, McGill).
For more on Prof. Arch’s publications, see her academic bio: https://www.whitman.edu/academics/majors-and-minors/history/history-faculty/jakobina-k-arch
This podcast was produced with the help of Renée Manderville (Project Manager, IOWC), Archisman Chaudhuri and Philip Gooding (both postdoctoral fellows, IOWC, McGill).
More episodes of the podcast The Indian Ocean World Podcast
Kundai Manamere - "Malaria on the Move"
26/11/2025
Devika Shankar - “An Encroaching Sea”
25/09/2025
Fiona Williamson - Imperial Weather: Meteorology, Science, and the Environment in Colonial Malaya
10/09/2025
Alastair McClure - "Trials of Sovereignty"
15/07/2025
Adam Bobbette - The Pulse of the Earth
27/02/2025
Lukas Ley & Tarini Monga - S.AND
16/10/2024
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.