Maps of the Edo Period

  • Berry Mary Elizabeth, Japan in print: information and nation in the early modern period, Berkeley, Calif, University of California Press, 2006 (Asia: local studies/global themes 12).
  • Fiévé Nicolas et Waley Paul (éds.), Japanese capitals in historical perspective: place, power and memory in Kyoto, Edo and Tokyo, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2003.
  • Gonnami Tsuneharu, « Images of foreigners in Edo period maps and prints », Journal of East Asian Libraries (116), 01.10.1998, bas, pp. 5‑18.
  • Kawamura Hirotada, « The National Map of Japan in the Tokugawa Shogunate (1633–1725): Misunderstandings Corrected », Imago Mundi 69 (2), 2017, pp. 248‑254.
  • Leca Radu, « Maps of the World in Early Modern Japan », Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History, 2020. En ligne: <https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190277727.013.69>.
  • Loh Joseph F., When Worlds Collide: Art, Cartography, and Japanese Nanban World Map Screens, New York, Columbia University, 2013.
  • Papelitzky Elke, « A description and analysis of the Japanese world map Bankoku sōzu in its version of 1671 and some thoughts on the sources of the original Bankoku sōzu », Journal of Asian History 48, 01.01.2014, bas, pp. 15‑59.
  • Shapinsky Peter D., « Polyvocal Portolans: Nautical Charts and Hybrid Maritime Cultures in Early Modern East Asia », Early Modern Japan 14, 2006, pp. 4‑26.
  • Yamashita Kazumasa (éd.), Chizu de yomu Edo jidai = Japanese maps of the Edo period, Tokyo, Kashiwa Shobō, 1998.
  • Yonemoto Marcia, Mapping early modern Japan: space, place, and culture in the Tokugawa period (1603-1868), Berkeley, Calif, University of California Press, 2003 (Asia: local studies/global themes 7).
  • Yonemoto Marcia, « The “spatial vernacular” in Tokugawa maps », Journal of Asian Studies 59 (3), 01.08.2000, bas, pp. 647‑666.
  • Edo jidai ‘kochizu’ sōran, Tokyo, Shin Jinbutsu Ōraisha, 1997.