
In 1848, five years before Japan opened its closed society to the West, a lone American in a whaleboat landed on the country’s northern shore, drawn only by a sense of mystery and a love of adventure. In this week’s episode of the Futility Closet podcast we’ll follow Ranald MacDonald as he travels the length of Japan toward a destiny that will transform the country.
We’ll also remember a Soviet hero and puzzle over some security-conscious neighbors. Thanks for listening!
Intro:
In 1794, two French Hussars began an episodic duel that would last until 1813.
In 1945, the Arkansas legislature accidentally repealed every law in the state.
Sources for our feature on Ranald MacDonald:
Frederik L. Schodt, Native American in the Land of the Shogun, 2003.
Jo Ann Roe, Ranald MacDonald: Pacific Rim Adventurer, 1997.
William S. Lewis and Naojiro Murakami, Ranald MacDonald: The Narrative of His Early Life on the Columbia Under the Hudson’s Bay Company’s Regime, 1990.
Herbert H. Gowen, Five Foreigners in Japan, 1936.
Gretchen Murphy, Shadowing the White Man’s Burden: U.S. Imperialism and the Problem of the Color Line, 2010.
Joel E. Ferris, “Ranald MacDonald: The Sailor Boy Who Visited Japan,” Pacific Northwest Quarterly 48:1 (January 1957), 13-16.
Benjamin MacDonald, “Narrative of Benjamin MacDonald,” Washington Historical Quarterly 16:3 (July 1925), 186-197.
David N. Cooper, “Behind the Bamboo Curtain: A Nineteenth-Century Canadian Adventurer in Japan,” Manitoba History 74 (Winter 2014), 40-44.
Gretchen Murphy, “‘A…
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