BOBC

WIKINDX Resources  

Inouye, Charles Shirō. Evanescence and Form: An Introduction to Japanese Culture. New York [etc.]: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. 
Added by: joachim (5/29/11, 6:26 PM)   
Resource type: Book
Language: en: English
ID no. (ISBN etc.): 1-403-96705-9
BibTeX citation key: Inouye2008
Email resource to friend
View all bibliographic details
Categories: General
Keywords: "Nausicaä", Animation, Film adaptation, Japan, Manga, Miyazaki. Hayao, Science Fiction
Creators: Inouye
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan (New York [etc.])
Views: 8/842
Attachments  
Abstract
If we thought that reality were changeable, fragile, and fleeting, would we take life more seriously or less seriously? This book contemplates the notion of hakanasa, the evanescence of all things, as understood by the Japanese. Their lived responses to this idea of impermanence have been various and even contradictory. Asceticism, fatalism, conformism. Hedonism, materialism, careerism. What this array of responses have in common are, first, a grounding in hakanasa, and, second, an emphasis on formality. Evanescence and Etiquette attempts to illuminate for the first time the ties between an epistemology of constant change and Japan's formal emphasis on etiquette and visuality.

Table of Contents

List of Figures (ix)
Acknowledgments (xi)
Historical Periods (xiii)

Part One: The Order of Here-and-Now: Ancient, Medieval, and Early Modern Japan (to 1868) (1)
In Spring the Cherry Blossoms (1)
Change and Nature (5)
Japanese Poetics and a First Consideration of Animism (10)
Utsusemi, the Cicada's Shell (17)
Hakanasa and mujo (26)
Anitya in a World of Spontaneity (31)
Life as It Seems, Nagarjuna's Emptiness (36)
Shukke: Leaving the World (39)
Success and Failure (45)
The Transcendental Order / the Order of Here-and-Now (51)
Zen, kata, and the Noh Theater (65)
Hedonism (69)
Matsuo Basho, Permanence and Change (74)
Mono no aware: The Sadness of Things (80)
Protocol and Loyal Retainers (86)
Inner and Outer, and the Expanding Context of Modernity (90)
Monstrosity (95)

Part Two: Change under the Transcendental Order: Late Modern Japan (1868–1970) (103)
The Colonial Context: Adapt or Die (103)
Explaining Japan: Linking Here-and-Now with the New World Order (110)
Japan as Bushido (113)
Japan as Tea-Ism (118)
Japan as Erotic Style (122)
In the Margins of Empire—the Rape of Nanking (129)
Other Horrors of Life on the Margins (134)
Kamikaze (137)
The A-Bomb, and a New Kind of Nothing (142)
Occupation: Radical Change as Salvation (151)
Decadence, Moving Away from Form (154)
To Live! (161)
Nihil versus Nothingness (166)
Higashiyama Kaii: Embracing Passivity (170)

Part Three: Return to Evanescence: Contemporary Japan (1970 to the Present) (175)
Fashion, and the Joy of Evanescence (175)
Postmodernism and a Cherry Blossom Refrain (185)
The End of the World (191)
Nausicaa and the Cicada-Shell World (195)
Seeking but Never Finding (197)
Anima, Anime, and Animism (205)
Conclusion (213)

Glossary of Important Terms (225)
Notes (231)
Works Cited (247)
Index (253)
Added by: joachim  Last edited by: joachim
WIKINDX 6.10.2 | Total resources: 14645 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: Modern Language Association (MLA)