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      Book

      Making Japanese Heritage
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      Book

      Making Japanese Heritage

      DOI link for Making Japanese Heritage

      Making Japanese Heritage book

      Making Japanese Heritage

      DOI link for Making Japanese Heritage

      Making Japanese Heritage book

      Edited ByChristoph Brumann, Rupert A. Cox
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2009
      eBook Published 30 September 2009
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203874110
      Pages 240
      eBook ISBN 9780203874110
      Subjects Area Studies, Museum and Heritage Studies, Social Sciences
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      Brumann, C., & Cox, R.A. (Eds.). (2009). Making Japanese Heritage (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203874110

      ABSTRACT

      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 even global political dimensions of cultural heritage. It shows how claims to heritage status in Japan stress different material qualities of objects, places and people - based upon their ages, originality and usage. Following on an introduction that thoroughly assesses the field, the ethnographic and historiographic case studies range from geisha; noh masks; and 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 appraise the construction of heritage in cases where the heritage value resides in the very substance of the object’s material composition - for example, in architecture, landscapes and designs - and show how the heritage industry adds values to existing assets: such as sacredness, urban charm or architectural and ethnic distinctiveness. The book questions the interpretation of material heritage as an enduring expression of social relations, aesthetic values and authenticity which, once conferred, undergoes no subsequent change, and standard dismissals of heritage as merely a tool for enshrining the nation; supporting the powerful; fostering nostalgic escapism; or advancing capitalist exploitation. Finally, it considers the role of people as agents of heritage production, and analyses the complexity of the relationships between people and objects.  This book is a rigorous assessment of how conceptions of Japanese heritage have been forged, and provides a wealth of evidence that questions established assumptions on the nature and social roles of heritage.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |18 pages

      Introduction

      ByRUPERT COX, CHRISTOPH BRUMANN

      part |2 pages

      Part I Performing Japaneseness through heritage

      chapter 1|10 pages

      Making “Japanese” tea

      ByKRISTIN SURAK

      chapter 2|13 pages

      Before making heritage: Internationalisation of geisha in the Meiji period

      ByMARIKO OKADA

      chapter 3|13 pages

      Making art in the Japanese way: nihonga as process and symbolic action ARUNAS GELUNAS

      part |2 pages

      Part II Institutionalising Japanese heritage

      chapter 4|19 pages

      Architecture, folklore studies, and cultural democracy: Nagakura Saburô and Hida Minzoku-mura

      ByNagakura Saburô and Hida Minzoku-mura PETER SIEGENTHALER

      chapter 5|14 pages

      Nô masks on stage and in museums: Approaches to the contextualisation and conservation of the Pitt Rivers Museum nô mask collection

      ByRACHEL PAYNE

      chapter 6|17 pages

      Company culture or patinated past? The display of corporate heritage in Sumitomo

      ByBART GAENS

      part |2 pages

      Part III Japanese local heritage and the wider world

      chapter 7|13 pages

      A heady heritage: The shifting biography of kashira (puppet heads) as cultural heritage objects in the Awaji tradition

      ByJANE MARIE LAW

      chapter 8|25 pages

      Cloth and identity in Yaeyama: A search for context

      ByAMANDA MAYER STINCHECUM

      chapter 9|22 pages

      Houses in motion: The revitalisation of Kyoto’s architectural heritage

      ByCHRISTOPH BRUMANN

      chapter 10|16 pages

      Automated alterities: movement and identity in the history of the Japanese Kobe ningyô

      ByRUPERT COX

      part |2 pages

      Part IV Perpetuating Japanese heritage

      chapter 11|13 pages

      Maintaining a Zen tradition in Japan: The concrete problem of priest succession

      ByMASAKI MATSUBARA

      chapter 12|13 pages

      Debating the past to determine the future in Shinkyô, a Japanese commune

      ByMICHAEL SHACKLETON
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