Bonds of Civility: Aesthetic Networks and the Political Origins of Japanese Culture

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Cambridge University Press, 28.02.2005 - 460 Seiten
In this path breaking book, Eiko Ikegami uncovers a complex history of social life in which aesthetic images became central to Japan's cultural identities. The people of premodern Japan built on earlier aesthetic traditions in part for their own sake, but also to find space for self-expression in the increasingly rigid and tightly controlled Tokugawa political system. In so doing, they incorporated the world of the beautiful within their social life which led to new modes of civility. They explored horizontal and voluntary ways of associating while immersing themselves in aesthetic group activities. Combining sociological insights in organizations with prodigious scholarship on cultural history, this book explores such wide-ranging topics as networks of performing arts, tea ceremony and haiku, the politics of kimono aesthetics, the rise of commercial publishing, the popularization of etiquette and manners, the vogue for androgyny in kabuki performance, and the rise of tacit modes of communication.
 

Inhalt

Aesthetic Japan and the Tokugawa Network
3
A Comparative Overview
19
Culture and Identity as Emergent Properties in Networks
44
The Transformation of Associational Politics
65
The Late Medieval Transformation of Za Arts in Struggles
102
Tokugawa State Formation and the Transformation
127
The Rise of Aesthetic Civility
140
The Politics of Border
171
Prelude to Section Three
239
Fashion State
245
Japanese Commercial
286
Etiquette and Manners
324
The Rise of Aesthetic Japan
363
Toward a Pluralistic View of Communication
380
Notes
387
Illustration Credits
437

The Rise of Social Power
204
Tacit Modes of Communication and Japanese National
221

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Autoren-Profil (2005)

Eiko Ikegami was born and raised in Tokyo, Japan. After receiving a university education in Japanese classical literature in Japan, she became a business journalist in Tokyo at the Nikkei, the Japan Economic Journal. In 1983, on a Fulbright program, she came to the United States for her graduate studies in sociology, at Harvard University, where she received her PhD in 1989. She held a number of fellowships and grants including Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. In 2002, she was elected as Chair of the Section of Comparative and Historical Sociology at the American Sociological Association. She is the author of Taming of the Samurai.

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