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Making Japanese Heritage (Japan Anthropology Workshop Series) PDF

239 Pages·2010·6.27 MB·English
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Making Japanese Heritage This book examines the making of Japanese heritage, investigating the ways in which particular objects, practices and institutions are ascribed public recog- nitionand political significance. Through detailedethnographicandhistorical case studies, it analyses the social, economic, and even global dimensions of cultural heritage. It shows how claims to heritage status in Japan stress dif- ferentmaterialqualitiesofobjects,placesandpeople–basedupontheirages, originality and usage. Following on an introduction that thoroughly assesses the field, the ethno- graphicandhistoriographiccasesaddresssuchthingsasgeisha;nômasks;the tea ceremony; urban architecture; automata; a utopian commune and the sites of Mitsubishi company history. They examine how their heritage value is made and re-made and show how the heritage industry adds values to existing assets such as sacredness, urban charm or architectural and ethnic distinctiveness. Making Japanese Heritage questions the interpretation of heritage as an enduring expression of social relations, aesthetic values and authenticity which, once conferred, undergoes no subsequent change, and standard dis- missals of heritage as merely a tool for enshrining the nation; supporting the powerful; fostering nostalgic escapism; or advancing capitalist exploitation. This book is a rigorous assessment of how conceptions of Japanese heritage have been forged, and provides a wealth of evidence that calls for reconsidering established assumptions onthenature and social roles of heritage. Christoph Brumann is a DFG Heisenberg Fellow at the University of Cologne, Germany. He has published widely on utopian communes in Japan and world- wide, gift-giving in Japan, the anthropological concept of culture, globalisation andurbananthropology. Rupert Cox is Lecturer in visual anthropology at the University of Manchester, UK.Hisresearchisontheintersectionofartandanthropologywithaparticular emphasis on sound recording. His books include The Zen Arts: An Anthro- pological Study of the Culture of Aesthetic Form in Japan and The Culture of Copying in Japan (both published by Routledge). Japan Anthropology Workshop Series Series editor: Joy Hendry, Oxford Brookes University Editorial Board: Pamela Asquith, University of Alberta Eyal Ben-Ari, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Hirochika Nakamaki, National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka Kirsten Refsing, University of Copenhagen Wendy Smith, Monash University Founder Member of the Editorial Board: Jan van Bremen, University of Leiden 1 A Japanese View of Nature 7 Dismantling the East–West The world of living things Dichotomy Kinji Imanishi EssaysinhonourofJanvanBremen Translated by Pamela J. Asquith, Edited by Joy Hendry and Heita Kawakatsu, Shusuke Yagi Heung Wah Wong and Hiroyuki Takasaki Edited and introduced by Pamela 8 PilgrimagesandSpiritualQuestsin J. Asquith Japan Edited by Maria Rodriguez del 2 Japan’s Changing Generations Alisal, Peter Ackermann and Are young people creating a new Dolores Martinez society? Edited by Gordon Mathews and 9 The Culture of Copying in Japan Bruce White Critical and historical perspectives Edited by Rupert Cox 3 The Care of the Elderly in Japan Yongmei Wu 10 Primary School in Japan Self, individuality and learning in 4 Community Volunteers in Japan elementary education Peter Cave Everyday stories of social change Lynne Y. Nakano 11 Globalisation and Japanese Organisational Culture 5 Nature, Ritual and Society in Japan’s Ryukyu Islands An ethnography of a Japanese corporation in France Arne Røkkum Mitchell W. Sedgwick 6 Psychotherapy and Religion in 12 Japanese Tourism and Travel Japan Culture The Japanese introspection Edited by Sylvie Guichard-Anguis practice of Naikan and Okpyo Moon Chikako Ozawa-de Silva 13 Making Japanese Heritage Edited by Christoph Brumann and Rupert Cox Making Japanese Heritage Edited by Christoph Brumann and Rupert Cox Firstpublished2010 byRoutledge 2ParkSquare,MiltonPark,Abingdon,OxonOX144RN SimultaneouslypublishedintheUSAandCanada byRoutledge 270MadisonAvenue,NewYork,NY10016 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2010. To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk. © 2010 Christoph Brumann and Rupert Cox for selection and editorial matter;individualcontributorstheircontribution Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthisbookmaybereprintedorreproducedor utilisedinanyformorbyanyelectronic,mechanical,orothermeans,now knownorhereafterinvented,includingphotocopyingandrecording,orin anyinformationstorageorretrievalsystem,withoutpermissioninwriting fromthepublishers. BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData AcataloguerecordforthisbookisavailablefromtheBritishLibrary LibraryofCongressCataloging inPublicationData MakingJapaneseheritage/editedbyChristophBrumannandRupertCox. p.cm.–(JapanAnthropologyWorkshopSeries) Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. 1.Materialculture–Japan.2.Japan–Sociallifeandcustoms.I.Brumann, Christoph.II.Cox,RupertIII.Series. GN635.J2M242009 306.0952–dc22 2009003456 ISBN 0-203-87411-0 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 978-0-415-41314-5 (hbk) ISBN978-0-203-87411-0(ebk) Contents List of illustrations vii List of contributors ix Series editor’s preface xii Acknowledgments and technical note xiv Introduction 1 RUPERTCOXANDCHRISTOPHBRUMANN PARTI Performing Japaneseness through heritage 19 1 Making “Japanese” tea 21 KRISTINSURAK 2 Before making heritage: internationalisation of geisha in the Meiji period 31 MARIKOOKADA 3 Making art in the Japanese way: nihonga as process and symbolic action 44 ARUNASGELUNAS PARTII Institutionalising Japanese heritage 57 4 Architecture, folklore studies, and cultural democracy: Nagakura Saburô and Hida Minzoku-mura 59 PETERSIEGENTHALER 5 Nô masks on stage and in museums: approaches to the contextualisation and conservation of the Pitt Rivers Museum nô mask collection 78 RACHELPAYNE vi Contents 6 Company culture or patinated past? The display of corporate heritage in Sumitomo 92 BARTGAENS PARTIII Japanese local heritage and the wider world 109 7 A heady heritage: the shifting biography of kashira (puppet heads) as cultural heritage objects in the Awaji tradition 111 JANEMARIELAW 8 Cloth and identity in Yaeyama: a search for context 124 AMANDAMAYERSTINCHECUM 9 Houses in motion: the revitalisation of Kyoto’s architectural heritage 149 CHRISTOPHBRUMANN 10 Automated alterities: movement and identity in the history of the Japanese Kobe ningyô 171 RUPERTCOX PARTIV Perpetuating Japanese heritage 187 11 Maintaining a Zen tradition in Japan: the concrete problem of priest succession 189 MASAKIMATSUBARA 12 Debating the past to determine the future in Shinkyô, a Japanese commune 202 MICHAELSHACKLETON Index 215 Illustrations Figures 4.1 Looking across the pond at Hida no Sato in the summer of 2002 60 4.2 The settlement of Ogimachi, a World Heritage site, is made up of several dozen gasshô structures 66 4.3 The first structure to host the Hida folklore museum, the Wakayama house, is now an integral part of the open-air museum 68 5.1 The nô mask display 79 5.2 Back of chûjô mask 82 5.3 Front of chûjô mask 82 5.4 Back of magojirô mask 84 5.5 Front of magojirô mask 84 5.6 Interior of Pitt Rivers Museum 88 6.1 Ôbaku (block of copper ore) wrapped with Shinto ropes (shimenawa), Besshi Copper Mine Commemorial Museum, Niihama 101 6.2 Statue of Kusunoki Masashige (Nankô) (1294–1336), outside the Imperial Palace, Tokyo 103 8.1 Minsaa sash made by Kuroshima Sumi, Taketomi Island, Okinawa, c. 1980 124 8.2 Three young girls, Okinawa, by Torii Ryûzô, 1904 133 8.3 Women of Nakasuji village, Taketomi Island, wear minsaa sashes for the local festival, Yunkai, in 2000 137 8.4 The five/four minsaa pattern adorns the Yaeyama Post Office in Ishigaki, 2000 139 8.5 The sidewalk in front of Ishigaki’s Chisun Hotel is paved with blue and white tiles arranged in the five/four minsaa pattern, 2001 140 9.1 Street front of classical kyô-machiya 150 9.2 Paper model and ground floor plan of classical kyô-machiya 151 9.3 Kyô-machiya interior and garden 151 9.4 Renovated kyô-machiya pastry shop with glass front 155 9.5 Renovated kyô-machiya integrating features of European-style street café 156 viii Illustrations 9.6 Kyô-machiya-style second floor over parking-tower drive-through 158 10.1 Kôbe ningyô 174 Table 9.1 Personal reasons for machiya preservation given by members of citizens’ group 163 Contributors Christoph Brumann is a DFG Heisenberg Fellow and social anthropologist based at the University of Cologne. He has published extensively about utopian communes in Japan and elsewhere, gift-giving in Japan, the anthropological concept of culture, globalisation, heritage, and the city of Kyoto. Currently,heiscompletingabookmanuscriptentitled‘ARightto thePast:Tradition,DemocracyandtheTownscapeinContemporaryKyoto’ and has started a multi-sited ethnographic field study of UNESCO World Heritage as a transnational institution. Rupert Cox is Lecturer in visual anthropology at the University of Manche- ster. His research is on the intersection of art and anthropology with a particular emphasis on sound recording. His books include The Zen Arts: an anthropological study of the culture of aesthetic form in Japan, and The Culture of Copying in Japan (both published by Routledge). Bart Gaens is Senior Researcher at the University of Helsinki. His research has focussed on the business organization of early modern merchant families, contemporary Japanese corporate culture, and representations of the salaryman in popular culture. In addition he has published on the Asia-EuropeMeeting(ASEM)andcurrentlycoordinatesaresearchproject on the EU’s interregional relations with Asia. Arunas Gelunas, Ph.D., teaches art theory and philosophy at the Vilnius Academy of Arts. He is also a visiting lecturer at the Centre for Oriental Studies, Vilnius University. He has published widely on art, philosophy andthenewmediainJapanandelsewhere,bothintheLithuanianandthe international academic and cultural press. His artistic works have been shown in 15 individual and more than 40 group exhibitions worldwide, and he has received awards for graphics and book design from Japan, France and Lithuania. Jane Marie Law is Associate Professor of Japanese Religions at the Depart- ment of Asian Studies, Cornell University, and Director of the Asian Religions Ph.D. Program. She served as director of the Cornell Religious Studies Program for eight years. Her books include Puppets of Nostalgia:

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This book examines the making of heritage in contemporary Japan, investigating the ways in which particular objects, practices and institutions are ascribed public recognition and political significance. Through detailed ethnographic and historical case studies, it analyses the social, economic, and
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