Contents

Home
About
Articles
Books
Dealers
Postcards
Card Publishers
Recommended Sites

RSSAtom

Recent Comments

  • jefferson (Drink Tansan: Look for the name J. Clifford-Wilkinson)

    I have seen a bottle at its label is clifford wilkinson TANSAN

  • ALEDZMIER (Drink Tansan: Look for the name J. Clifford-Wilkinson)

    i have a bottle color green,and it has a clifford wilkinson written on the bottle..

  • susan fanto (Greater Tokyo, Nijubashi, the Imperial Palace)

    Hi I have a copy of this postcard sent to my mother by my father dated 10 sept 1945 while he was in Japan in …

  • Recommended Sites
    Gerald Warner Collection

    The Gerald Warner Taiwan Image Collection is a photographic record of a US consul’s impressions of urban and rural life in Taiwan under Japanese colonial rule. Totaling 340 photographs and postcards gathered by Warner between August 26, 1937 and March 8, 1941, these images provide a snapshot of Taiwan’s hybrid culture of Chinese, Taiwanese, Austronesian, and Japanese influences. The subjects represented are wide-ranging, including clothing, arboriculture, urban structures, agriculture, religious rituals, topography, highways, parks, and more. These digitized images have been researched and annotated to serve as a web-based encyclopedia of colonial Taiwan’s material culture.

    Most of these photographs were taken for commercial purposes under conditions of colonial domination. Artistic license, ethnographic sensibilities and propagandistic intentions are all documented herein, revealing a cross-section of the early twentieth-century Japanese imperial imagination. Through the use of captions, staged “traditional” motifs, and colorization, cropping, and re-touching of photos, idealized portraits of Japan’s largest tropical possession were disseminated throughout the empire and abroad.

    To track the “careers” of these images in print, genealogical records have been created for each entry. By tracking the history of images as they re-appear in subsequent publications, the cumulative process through which photographs become icons of peoples, places, and practices can be charted.

    Gerald Warner was born in Boothwyn, Pennsylvania on August 12, 1907. He commenced his East Asia foreign service as US vice consul at Tianjin (1931) and at Mukden (1934). Warner worked as language officer in Tokyo from 1935 and as consul at Taipei in 1937. After three and a half years in Taiwan, he was appointed consul at Tokyo in February 1941. Warner and his American colleagues were put under house arrest in Japan until November 2, 1942, when they were freed in a prisoner exchange. After Japan’s surrender, Warner returned to Asia as 2nd secretary and consul at Chongqing. Warner retired from the foreign service in 1967. He died at age 81 on June 20, 1989.

    2007-12-16 Comment