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An Anthropological Lifetime in Japan: The Writings of Joy Hendry PDF

714 Pages·2016·7.21 MB·English
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An Anthropological Lifetime in Japan An Anthropological Lifetime in Japan The Writings of Joy Hendry Edited and Introduced by Joy Hendry LEIDEN | BOSTON Library of Congress Control Number: 2016960224 Typeface for the Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic scripts: “Brill”. See and download: brill.com/brill-typeface. isbn 978-90-04-30286-0 (hardback) isbn 978-90-04-30287-7 (e-book) Copyright 2017 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill, Brill Hes & De Graaf, Brill Nijhoff, Brill Rodopi and Hotei Publishing. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Koninklijke Brill NV provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910, Danvers, MA 01923, USA. Fees are subject to change. This book is printed on acid-free paper and produced in a sustainable manner. Contents Introduction 1 Fieldwork 1 From Scrambled Messages to an Impromptu Dip: Serendipity in Finding a Field Location 19 2 The Paradox of Friendship in the Field: Analysis of a Long-Term Anglo-Japanese Relationship 34 Marriage and Some Early Theoretical Contributions 3 Is Science Maintaining Tradition in Japan? 49 4 The Modification of Tradition in Modern Japanese Weddings and Some Implications for the Social Structure 60 5 Tomodachi kō: Age-Mate Groups in Northern Kyushu 67 6 Shoes: The Early Learning of an Important Distinction in Japanese Society 80 7 “The Fix” in Japanese Society 89 8 Marriage and the Family in Modernising Japan 102 9 The Continuing Case of Japan 123 Child Rearing and Education 10 Becoming Japanese: A Social Anthropological View of Child- Rearing 139 11 Kindergartens and the Transition from Home to School Education 156 vi CONTENTS 12 Peer Pressure and Kindergartens in Japan 164 13 Children’s Contests in Japan 177 14 St Valentine and St Nicholas Travel Abroad: Success and Internationalisation in Japanese Education 189 15 Individualism and Individuality: Entry into a Social World 201 16 Bags, Objects and Education in Japan 216 17 Material Objects and Mathematics in the Life of the Japanese Primary School Child 226 Politeness, Housewives and the Wrapping Idea 18 The Use and Abuse of Politeness Formulae: Some Social Implications 241 19 Respect, Solidarity or Contempt? Politeness and Communication in Modern Japan 250 20 Humidity, Hygiene, or Ritual Care: Some Thoughts on Wrapping as a Social Phenomenon 256 21 To Wrap or not to Wrap: Politeness and Penetration in Ethnographic Inquiry 273 22 The Armour of Honorific Speech: Some Lateral Thinking about Keigo 294 23 Politeness and Formality in Japanese Social Relations 302 24 Order, Elegance and Purity: The Life of the Professional Housewife 321 25 Honorifics as Dialect: The Expression and Manipulation of Boundaries in Japanese 338 CONTENTS vii 26 The Role of the Professional Housewife 352 27 Wrapping and Japanese Presentation: Is this Waste or Care? 368 28 The Sacred Power of Wrapping 383 Cultural Display 29 Gardens and the Wrapping of Space in Japan: Some Benefits of a Balinese Insight 403 30 Nature Tamed: Gardens as a Microcosm of Japan’s View of the World 412 31 Who is Representing Whom? Gardens, Theme Parks and the Anthropologist in Japan 435 32 Pine, Ponds and Pebbles: Gardens and Visual Culture 450 33 The Whole World as Heritage? Foreign Country Theme Parks in Japan 468 34 Foreign Country Theme Parks: A New Theme or an Old Japanese Pattern? 476 35 The Japanese Tattoo: Play or Purpose? 496 36 Old Gods, New Pilgrimages: A Whistle-stop Tour of Japanese International Theme Parks 511 37 Shakespeare on Show in Japan: An Anthropological Analysis of Cultural Display 522 38 “The Past, Foreign Countries and Fantasy . . . They All Make for a Good Outing:” Staging the Past in Japan and Some Other Locations 539 viii CONTENTS Some Sundry Contributions 39 Nursing in Japan 557 40 Food as Social Nutrition? The Japanese Case 566 41 Drinking and Gender in Japan 573 42 The Ritual of the Revolving Towel 587 43 The Chrysanthemum Continues to Flower: Ruth Benedict and Some Perils of Popular Anthropology 603 44 Building Bridges, Common Ground, and the Role of the Anthropologist 618 Summing Up 45 Japan and Pacific Anthropology: Some Ideas for New Research 643 46 Learning that Emerges in Times of Trouble: A Few Cases from Japan 657 47 Forty Years of Research and Teaching on Japan: A Personal Trajectory 670 Joy Hendry’s Full Bibliography 693 Index 699 Introduction Having spent more than half of my life working in and writing about Japan, I was delighted when Paul Norbury asked me if I would like to bring together some of my papers in this collected volume. Many of the articles I wrote as a young, aspiring academic were not well placed for later access, and read- ing them through for this project, I realised that I had often spent much more time on them than I was able to do for papers I wrote once I had taken up a teaching position. Those old papers may not break new ground in a world that has moved on since then, but it is nice to place them in the context of the changing arena that Japan has been, and also to have documented some of the things that didn’t change, despite the expectations of convergence theo- rists. The book also offers me the opportunity to show how apparently dispa- rate subjects drew one on another as my time as a researcher (and an individual moving through my own life) developed over the years. This introduction will explain how I came to the field in the first place, how the Japanese side of my life opened out into such a wonderful source of exciting topics to document, and then how I have now moved on into looking at broader global issues. Early Influences Born in October 1945, a few weeks after the end of World War II, my life span has coincided almost completely with Japan’s post-war reconstruction, although it took me until adulthood to understand the significance of this coincidence. I was delivered by caesarean section to a medical family, and understood from an early age that as my older brother had also been born in this way, I would not have existed without the modern techniques that enabled my mother to survive such an intervention. This is probably relevant in that I chose to devote my first degree to science, perhaps also inspired by the fact that the operation was carried out by Dame Hilda Lloyd, the first woman gynaecologist to head the Royal College of Gynaecologists and Obstetricians. That a woman should have a career was taken for granted in my family then, but it was only later that I came to discover the excitement of the study of language, anthropology or even history! My encounter with Japan was a little unusual, too, and this I will shortly recount, but I think that one more story of my early childhood might help to inform the approach I eventually chose. My father had served as a medical officer in the British army in the war, including a period in Burma where he © koninklijke brill nv, leiden, ���7 | doi ��.��63/978900430�877_00�

Description:
Joy Hendry's collection demonstrates the value of an anthropological approach to understanding a particular society by taking the reader through her own discovery of the field, explaining her practice of it in Oxford and Japan, and then offering a selection of the results and findings she obtained.
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