Making Tea, Making Japan : Cultural Nationalism in Practice
Making Tea, Making Japan : Cultural Nationalism in Practice
Click to enlarge
Author(s): Surak, Kristin
ISBN No.: 9780804778664
Pages: 272
Year: 201211
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 184.14
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"Kristin Surak''s fine study unpacks the social and historical context of tea and its ceremonial preparation as a highly illustrative case in point of nationalized cultural production and representation. Deftly crossing disciplinary boundaries between anthropology, sociology, and history, Making Tea, Making Japan is a well-crafted and interpretively provocative book that anyone with an interest in Japanese society and the theoretical dynamics of nationalism will find fascinating . [B]eautifully written and lucidly argued, the book offers much of value for scholars and students of modern Japan and the cultural manifestations of national identity there and in other parts of the world."--Erik Esselstrom, Histoire sociale / Social History "If you were ever curious about just what makes the tea ceremony such a Japanese thing, then Kristin Surak''s book, Making Tea, Making Japan , should answer your questions from all possible angles. Surak''s passion and love for the topic emanate from the pages. This is not a simple guidebook to enchant novices and teach them the basic steps to get started in the Japanese ritual of ''tea''. Surak''s comprehensive research will take those interested deep into the practice''s background and allow them to see the tea ceremony as a window into the soul of Japanese national identity. "-- Metropolis "The book uses historical analysis to show how tea became an important measure of national competence, and ethnographic analysis to show how the processes of differentiation occur.


All this is achieved in elegant prose that is a joy to read."--Chris Perkins, H-Net "Surak''s greatest strength is her awareness of the factors that inform the tea ceremony''s central place in Japanese society, from commercial structures allowing the seamless delivery of the objects and architecture of tea anywhere on the globe, to the casual use of history--not always accurate--deployed in a Sunday lesson. Surak''s book offers a scholarly story of choreography and commercialization and will find its way into future dissertations and onto the shelves of school libraries."--Dana Buntrock, Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Cultural Review "Making tea for a guest in Japan is a highly encultured act, demanding much more than a pour of hot water over powdered tea. Kristin Surak has plumbed the depths of the practice and demonstrated the enduring meanings of tea for Japanese performers of the craft."--Merry White, Boston University "Kristin Surak''s richly contextualized study shows in vivid detail how and why tea came to be, and remains, such a strong carrier of nation in Japan, at once performance and product. Sociologists in particular will not want to miss the fine ethnographic investigation of the tea ceremony in contemporary Japan."--Priscilla Ferguson, Columbia University "Surak''s careful ethnography and clear theoretical analysis demonstrate the historical role of the tea ceremony in constructing and defining the nation, but she also shows how it is an important part of the slightly different work of maintaining and explicating Japanese-ness.


Through careful ethnographic details she shows how the tea ceremony is embodied in ways both gendered and historically contingent; how it is used to distinguish Japanese from other Asians, Asia from the West, ''good'' Japanese from others who are less good; and how it is carried not only in performative bodies but in places/spaces. This often fascinating and lively study of chanoyu draws the reader through these various, and intertwined, processes over Japan''s recent historical past, unpacking a rich trove of material artefacts, rituals, and texts."--Sarah Corse, University of Virginia "Kristin Surak''s excellent work, Making Tea, Making Japan , provides an eye-opening survey of the history and practice of chanoyu that reveals the tea world''s institutional frameworks and patterns of authority, physical and material aspect.


To be able to view the table of contents for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
To be able to view the full description for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...