Hylla
Personnamn
Titel och upphov The Japanese house : material culture in the modern home
Utgivning, distribution etc.
Utgivningsår
SAB klassifikationskod
Fysisk beskrivning x, 243 p. : ill. (chiefly col.) : 25 cm.
Serietitel - ej biuppslagsform
Seriebiuppslag under titel
Anmärkning: Bibliografi etc. Includes bibliographical references and index.
Term
Geografiskt namn
ISBN 1-84520-517-0 978-1-84520-517-1 (pbk.) 978-1-84520-517-1 : 1-84520-516-2 (hbk.) 1-84520-516-2 978-1-84520-516-4 (hbk.) 978-1-84520-516-4 : 1-84520-517-0 (pbk.)
Antal i kö:
*00001689nam a22005897a 4500
*00129519
*007|||||||||||||||||||||||
*008110824s2010 enka | 001 0 eng|d
*020 $a1-84520-517-0
*020 $a978-1-84520-517-1 (pbk.)
*020 $a978-1-84520-517-1 :$c¹19.99
*020 $a1-84520-516-2 (hbk.)
*020 $a1-84520-516-2
*020 $a978-1-84520-516-4 (hbk.)
*020 $a978-1-84520-516-4 :$c¹60.00
*020 $a1-84520-517-0 (pbk.)
*035 $a(Ko)33767
*084 $aMuba-oec
*084 $aIcda-oec
*1001 $aDaniels, Inge
*24514$aThe Japanese house :$bmaterial culture in the modern home /$cInge Daniels ; with photography by Susan Andrews.
*260 $aOxford :$bBERG ,$c2010.
*300 $ax, 243 p. :$bill. (chiefly col.) :$c25 cm.
*4900 $aMaterializing culture
*504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
*650 4$aDwellings
*650 4$aJapan.
*650 4$aArchitecture , Domestic
*650 4$aJapan.
*650 4$aInterior decoration
*650 4$aJapan.
*650 4$aMaterial culture
*650 4$aJapan.
*650 4$aArchitecture and anthropology
*650 4$aJapan.
*650 4$aFamilies
*650 4$aJapan.
*650 4$aBostadshus
*650 4$asociala aspekter
*650 4$aJapan
*650 4$aBostadshus
*650 4$aJapan
*650 4$aMateriell kultur
*650 4$aJapan
*651 0$aJapan$xSocial life and customs.
*7001 $aAndrews, Susan$4pht
*830 0$aMaterializing culture.
*8520 $hARKITEKTUR - Ic-o
^
Det finns inga omdömen till denna titeln.
Klicka här
för att vara den första som skriver ett omdöme.
Inge Daniels goes behind the doors of real Japanese homes to find out how highly private domestic lives are lived in Japan. The book examines every aspect of the home and daily life- decoration, display, furniture, the tatami mat, eating, sleeping, gift-giving, recycling and worship. 'This impressive study of the modern Japanese home takes the reader into the domestic worlds of middle-class men and women, showing how aesthetic practices are shaped by national ideologies regarding gender and the family, as well as by a sense of the past encountering the transformative energies of modernization.' David Morgan, Duke University
Acknowledgements p. ix Introduction p. 1 The Japanese House? p. 1 Ethnographies of the Home: Anthropology of the Everyday p. 4 Japanese Pioneers in the Study of Domestic Material Culture p. 5 The Fieldwork Setting: 'Japan Is not Tokyo' p. 8 The Participants: Family, Class and Homeownership p. 15 Material Methodologies: There Is More to Understanding than Meaning p. 18 Other Ways of Telling p. 21 Synopsis of Chapters p. 24 Thirty Homes in the Kansai Region p. 12 Feeling at Home p. 27 'A Happy Family Together' p. 27 From Tatami-based to Chair-based Living p. 29 The Post-war 'LDK Home' p. 31 Bathing and Belonging p. 38 Tatami Mats: Multifunctionality and Nostalgia p. 41 Japanese and Western styles p. 43 A Home-like Atmosphere p. 46 Conclusion: Affectionate Ties p. 47 The Choreography of Domestic Slippers p. 50 Home and the Community p. 53 Gates, Fences and Walls p. 53 'We Would Rather Have a Nice English Garden' p. 56 'Everyone Needs a Garage' p. 57 Between the Window and the Hallway p. 60 Red Buckets and Neighbourhood Cooperation p. 63 Local Communities of Limited Liability p. 69 Conclusion: Homes Inside Out p. 74 Street Gardens p. 76 Wifely Duties and Neighbourhood Surveillance p. 78 Domestic Spirituality p. 81 Bonds with the Ancestors p. 81 The Duty of Care of the Eldest Son p. 83 Domestic Cycles of 'Annual Events' p. 83 God Shelves and Auspiciousness p. 86 Zodiac Animals and the Temporality of Luck p. 91 Tensions between the Generations p. 94 New Family Models and Female Rebels p. 95 Conclusion: Threats to the Spiritual Defence System? p. 98 Religion as Action p. 102 Tatami Tastes p. 105 From Male to Female Domestic Taste p. 105 Full-time and Part-time Housewives p. 107 A National Domestic Taste? p. 108 Eclectic Alcoves p. 112 'New Is Just Better': Traditional and Modern Aesthetics p. 113 Male Minimalist Design p. 114 An Overall Aesthetic Scheme p. 117 'We Have "A Son in a Box'" p. 120 Male Domestic Stereotypes: 'Japanese Fathers Have No Holidays' p. 122 Do-it-yourself p. 124 Conclusion: Humour and Gender Stereotypes p. 125 Contemporary Alcoves p. 128 Stuff and Storage p. 131 The Ideology of Tidiness p. 131 Storehouse Living: Circulation Versus Accumulation p. 133 Storage Strategies p. 134 Furniture Walls: Storage and Display p. 139 Dowries and Furniture Provisioning p. 142 Starter Homes p. 143 Life Cycle Rupture Points: 'If I Had a House Like a Castle, I Would Take Everything' p. 146 Conclusion: Conduits and Containers, Circulation and Accumulation p. 149 Women and Their Kimonos p. 152 Rebuilding the Family Home p. 154 Troublesome Things p. 157 Domestic Disarray? p. 153 Souvenir Cabinets: Objects Frozen in Time and Space p. 161 The Tyranny of Ornaments p. 164 Commemorative, Decorative Gifts and Unique Relationships p. 165 Ephemeral Gifts and the Renewal of Value p. 170 Surplus, Divestment and Informal Sociality p. 172 Conclusion: Possibilities and Constraints of Japanese Gift Exchange p. 174 The Dolls' Festival p. 178 Recycling Domestic Goods p. 180 Conclusions: Frictions, Gaps and Blockages p. 183 Domestic Frictions: Between Duty and Desire p. 183 Slippages between People and Things: Material Culture and the Messiness of Everyday Life p. 186 State Interference, Religious Interventions, and the Creative Possibilities of Constraints p. 188 The House: A Model for Studying 'Common Constraints across Diverse Cultural Environments' p. 192 Glossary: Japanese Vocabulary p. 197 Notes p. 201 Bibliography p. 215 Figures p. 227 Susan Andrews's Photographs p. 231 Index p. 235