Envisioning the Empress illuminates dynamic and powerful empresses who impacted not only women in their own time but whose influence extended to later generations of royalty, creating a greater role for imperial women and elevating the status of womens roles at a crucial juncture in Japanese history. The central focus of this book is visual monarchy, exploring how the empress biographies were primarily expressed in visual culture and how their images worked in support of Japans imperial policies in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The book begins with a brief overview of premodern and modern imperial women to orient the reader. In each chapter, different media, audiences, and distribution channels for constructing the narrative of feminine imperial power in Japan are addressed alongside biographical information. It is argued that the ultimate purpose of all of these images was to elevate the empress and promote her image as a conventional role model for modern women, but one with enough celebrity cache to maintain popularity. The images of the modern empresses, as distributed by the Imperial Household Agency, strike a balance between propaganda and popular media, noble philanthropist and upper-middle class role model, celebrity and mother of the nation. The modern empress image was crafted to be both exalted and approachable and worked to establish individual biographies while simultaneously establishing the position of the empress as timeless in the public eye. Envisioning the Empress introduces students of royal studies as well as modern Japanese history and art history to this fascinating element of the history of monarchy and womens history more broadly.
Envisioning the Empress illuminates dynamic and powerful empresses who impacted not only women in their own time, but whose influence extended to later generations of royalty, creating a greater role for imperial women and elevating the status of womens roles at a crucial juncture in Japanese history.
Introduction: The Visual Monarchy
Part I
Chapter One: The Modern Imperial Family: Institutions and Images
Chapter Two: Mimesis and Multiples: Empress Shken and the Power of Print in
Establishing the Public Empress Persona
Chapter Three: The Optics of Modernity: Empress Teimei, Photography, Mass
Media, and Gender in the Imperial Likeness
Part II
Chapter Four: Toward the Sacred and the Standard: Formality, Lineage, and
Decorum in the Modern Japanese Imperial Portrait
Chapter Five: Fashion, National Identity, and the Community of Royals: Global
Monarchical Visual Culture Between the Meiji and Taish Periods
Chapter Six: Mourning and Memory: The Visual Politics of Imperial Funerals
and Memorial Sites
Conclusion
Appendix
Bibliography
Alison J. Miller is Associate Professor of Art History at the University of the South (Sewanee). Her scholarship focuses on images of women across visual media in modern Japan. She is co-editor of The Visual Culture of Meiji Japan: Negotiating the Transition to Modernity (2021) and Transposed Memory: Visual Sites of National Recollection in 20th and 21st Century East Asia (2024).