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In the West the Japanese house has reached iconic status in its architecture, decoration and style. Is this neat, carefully constructed version of Japanese life in fact a myth? Inge Daniels goes behind the doors of real Japanese homes to find out how highly private domestic lives are lived in Japan.
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In the West the Japanese house has reached iconic status in its architecture, decoration and style. Is this neat, carefully constructed version of Japanese life in fact a myth? Inge Daniels goes behind the doors of real Japanese homes to find out how highly private domestic lives are lived in Japan.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Materializing Culture
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. September 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 188mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 548g
- ISBN-13: 9781845205171
- ISBN-10: 1845205170
- Artikelnr.: 26552647
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Materializing Culture
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. September 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 188mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 548g
- ISBN-13: 9781845205171
- ISBN-10: 1845205170
- Artikelnr.: 26552647
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Inge Daniels is Lecturer in Social Anthropology, Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxford.
Acknowledgments Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION SPREAD 1: Map with locations and
images of exteriors of the homes studied Chapter 2 HOMES INSIDE OUT Gates,
fences and walls 'We would rather have a nice English garden' 'Everyone
needs a garage' Between the window and the hallway Red buckets and
neighbourhood cooperation Local communities of limited liability
Conclusion: The inside out SPREAD 2: Street gardens; green fences and
terracotta walls SPREAD 3: Wifely duties and neighbourhood surveillance
Chapter 3 FEELING AT HOME 'The pleasures of a happy home' From tatami to
chair-based living The postwar 'LDK home': 1. The sofa and dining table 2.
Double beds 'Bathing is my way to relax' Tatami mats 'A space to relax'
Conclusion: Affectionate ties SPREAD 4: The choreography of domestic
slippers Chapter 4 TATAMI TASTES Male domestic taste and sophistication
Full-time and part-time housewives A national domestic taste? Eclectic
alcoves 'New is better': traditional and modern aesthetics Male minimal
design The exception: a modern aesthetic scheme 'We have "a son in a box''
' Male domestic stereotypes: 'Japanese fathers have no
holidays'Do-it-Yourself Conclusion: Gender stereotypes SPREAD 5: Alcoves
half full or half empty? Chapter 5 STUFF AND STORAGE The ideology of
tidiness Storehouse living: circulation and accumulation Storage
strategies: 1. Expanding the home 2. 'Living among one's furniture'
Furniture walls Dowries and provisioning The contemporary starter home Life
cycle rupture points: 'if I had a house like a castle, I would take
everything'Conclusion: Conduits and containers SPREAD 6: Women and their
kimono SPREAD 7: Destroying and rebuilding the family home Chapter 6
TROUBLESOME THINGS Domestic disarray? Souvenir Cabinets: objects frozen in
time and space Troublesome Things Commemorative gifts and unique
relationships Ephemeral gifts and the renewal of relationships Surplus,
divestment and informal sociality Conclusion: pressures and constraints of
gift culture SPREAD 8: The Dolls Festival SPREAD 9: Bazaars and flea
markets Chapter 7 THE LOCUS OF SPIRITUAL IN THE DOMESTIC The house-building
ceremony The domestic cycle of 'annual events' God shelves and
auspiciousness The temporality of luck Affective and material bonds with
the ancestors A son's duty of care? Inter-generational tensions New family
models Conclusion: Causality and self-determination SPREAD 10: Religion as
action Chapter 8 CONCLUSION Notes Bibliography Index
images of exteriors of the homes studied Chapter 2 HOMES INSIDE OUT Gates,
fences and walls 'We would rather have a nice English garden' 'Everyone
needs a garage' Between the window and the hallway Red buckets and
neighbourhood cooperation Local communities of limited liability
Conclusion: The inside out SPREAD 2: Street gardens; green fences and
terracotta walls SPREAD 3: Wifely duties and neighbourhood surveillance
Chapter 3 FEELING AT HOME 'The pleasures of a happy home' From tatami to
chair-based living The postwar 'LDK home': 1. The sofa and dining table 2.
Double beds 'Bathing is my way to relax' Tatami mats 'A space to relax'
Conclusion: Affectionate ties SPREAD 4: The choreography of domestic
slippers Chapter 4 TATAMI TASTES Male domestic taste and sophistication
Full-time and part-time housewives A national domestic taste? Eclectic
alcoves 'New is better': traditional and modern aesthetics Male minimal
design The exception: a modern aesthetic scheme 'We have "a son in a box''
' Male domestic stereotypes: 'Japanese fathers have no
holidays'Do-it-Yourself Conclusion: Gender stereotypes SPREAD 5: Alcoves
half full or half empty? Chapter 5 STUFF AND STORAGE The ideology of
tidiness Storehouse living: circulation and accumulation Storage
strategies: 1. Expanding the home 2. 'Living among one's furniture'
Furniture walls Dowries and provisioning The contemporary starter home Life
cycle rupture points: 'if I had a house like a castle, I would take
everything'Conclusion: Conduits and containers SPREAD 6: Women and their
kimono SPREAD 7: Destroying and rebuilding the family home Chapter 6
TROUBLESOME THINGS Domestic disarray? Souvenir Cabinets: objects frozen in
time and space Troublesome Things Commemorative gifts and unique
relationships Ephemeral gifts and the renewal of relationships Surplus,
divestment and informal sociality Conclusion: pressures and constraints of
gift culture SPREAD 8: The Dolls Festival SPREAD 9: Bazaars and flea
markets Chapter 7 THE LOCUS OF SPIRITUAL IN THE DOMESTIC The house-building
ceremony The domestic cycle of 'annual events' God shelves and
auspiciousness The temporality of luck Affective and material bonds with
the ancestors A son's duty of care? Inter-generational tensions New family
models Conclusion: Causality and self-determination SPREAD 10: Religion as
action Chapter 8 CONCLUSION Notes Bibliography Index
Acknowledgments Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION SPREAD 1: Map with locations and
images of exteriors of the homes studied Chapter 2 HOMES INSIDE OUT Gates,
fences and walls 'We would rather have a nice English garden' 'Everyone
needs a garage' Between the window and the hallway Red buckets and
neighbourhood cooperation Local communities of limited liability
Conclusion: The inside out SPREAD 2: Street gardens; green fences and
terracotta walls SPREAD 3: Wifely duties and neighbourhood surveillance
Chapter 3 FEELING AT HOME 'The pleasures of a happy home' From tatami to
chair-based living The postwar 'LDK home': 1. The sofa and dining table 2.
Double beds 'Bathing is my way to relax' Tatami mats 'A space to relax'
Conclusion: Affectionate ties SPREAD 4: The choreography of domestic
slippers Chapter 4 TATAMI TASTES Male domestic taste and sophistication
Full-time and part-time housewives A national domestic taste? Eclectic
alcoves 'New is better': traditional and modern aesthetics Male minimal
design The exception: a modern aesthetic scheme 'We have "a son in a box''
' Male domestic stereotypes: 'Japanese fathers have no
holidays'Do-it-Yourself Conclusion: Gender stereotypes SPREAD 5: Alcoves
half full or half empty? Chapter 5 STUFF AND STORAGE The ideology of
tidiness Storehouse living: circulation and accumulation Storage
strategies: 1. Expanding the home 2. 'Living among one's furniture'
Furniture walls Dowries and provisioning The contemporary starter home Life
cycle rupture points: 'if I had a house like a castle, I would take
everything'Conclusion: Conduits and containers SPREAD 6: Women and their
kimono SPREAD 7: Destroying and rebuilding the family home Chapter 6
TROUBLESOME THINGS Domestic disarray? Souvenir Cabinets: objects frozen in
time and space Troublesome Things Commemorative gifts and unique
relationships Ephemeral gifts and the renewal of relationships Surplus,
divestment and informal sociality Conclusion: pressures and constraints of
gift culture SPREAD 8: The Dolls Festival SPREAD 9: Bazaars and flea
markets Chapter 7 THE LOCUS OF SPIRITUAL IN THE DOMESTIC The house-building
ceremony The domestic cycle of 'annual events' God shelves and
auspiciousness The temporality of luck Affective and material bonds with
the ancestors A son's duty of care? Inter-generational tensions New family
models Conclusion: Causality and self-determination SPREAD 10: Religion as
action Chapter 8 CONCLUSION Notes Bibliography Index
images of exteriors of the homes studied Chapter 2 HOMES INSIDE OUT Gates,
fences and walls 'We would rather have a nice English garden' 'Everyone
needs a garage' Between the window and the hallway Red buckets and
neighbourhood cooperation Local communities of limited liability
Conclusion: The inside out SPREAD 2: Street gardens; green fences and
terracotta walls SPREAD 3: Wifely duties and neighbourhood surveillance
Chapter 3 FEELING AT HOME 'The pleasures of a happy home' From tatami to
chair-based living The postwar 'LDK home': 1. The sofa and dining table 2.
Double beds 'Bathing is my way to relax' Tatami mats 'A space to relax'
Conclusion: Affectionate ties SPREAD 4: The choreography of domestic
slippers Chapter 4 TATAMI TASTES Male domestic taste and sophistication
Full-time and part-time housewives A national domestic taste? Eclectic
alcoves 'New is better': traditional and modern aesthetics Male minimal
design The exception: a modern aesthetic scheme 'We have "a son in a box''
' Male domestic stereotypes: 'Japanese fathers have no
holidays'Do-it-Yourself Conclusion: Gender stereotypes SPREAD 5: Alcoves
half full or half empty? Chapter 5 STUFF AND STORAGE The ideology of
tidiness Storehouse living: circulation and accumulation Storage
strategies: 1. Expanding the home 2. 'Living among one's furniture'
Furniture walls Dowries and provisioning The contemporary starter home Life
cycle rupture points: 'if I had a house like a castle, I would take
everything'Conclusion: Conduits and containers SPREAD 6: Women and their
kimono SPREAD 7: Destroying and rebuilding the family home Chapter 6
TROUBLESOME THINGS Domestic disarray? Souvenir Cabinets: objects frozen in
time and space Troublesome Things Commemorative gifts and unique
relationships Ephemeral gifts and the renewal of relationships Surplus,
divestment and informal sociality Conclusion: pressures and constraints of
gift culture SPREAD 8: The Dolls Festival SPREAD 9: Bazaars and flea
markets Chapter 7 THE LOCUS OF SPIRITUAL IN THE DOMESTIC The house-building
ceremony The domestic cycle of 'annual events' God shelves and
auspiciousness The temporality of luck Affective and material bonds with
the ancestors A son's duty of care? Inter-generational tensions New family
models Conclusion: Causality and self-determination SPREAD 10: Religion as
action Chapter 8 CONCLUSION Notes Bibliography Index







