ABSTRACT

From its origins as a distinct set of ritualised practices in the sixteenth century to its international expansion in the twentieth, tea culture has had a major impact on artistic production, connoisseurship, etiquette, food, design and more recently, on notions of Japaneseness. The authors dispel the myths around the development of tea practice, dispute the fiction of the dominance of aesthetics over politics in tea, and demonstrate that writing history has always been an integral part of tea culture.

chapter 1|21 pages

Commerce, politics, and tea

The career of Imai Sōkyū (1520-1593)

chapter 4|24 pages

Sen Kōshin Sōsa (1613–1672)

Writing tea history

chapter 5|27 pages

Karamono for sencha

Transformations in the taste for Chinese art

chapter 7|33 pages

Rikyū has left the tea room

National cinema interrogates the anecdotal legend

chapter 8|20 pages

Tea records

Kaiki and oboegaki in contemporary Japanese tea practice