A Companion to the Anthropology of JapanISBN: 978-0-631-22955-1
Hardcover
544 pages
July 2005, Wiley-Blackwell
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Other Available Formats: Paperback
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Reference Reviews
"This is a handsomely produced volume in the recently launched Blackwell series of companions to the major fields of anthropology. ... Well-written and comprehensively documented."
Ethnic and Racial Studies
“Despite the magnitude of the task, Robertson has
succeeded in this collection. Taken together, these 29 original
chapters provide historical and theoretical grounding across a
range of subjects. The diverse approaches taken here offer insight
into a great variety of cultural aspects and social players, but
articulate a ‘Japan’ that eludes any claims of
homogeneity.”
Steffi Richter, Universität Leipzig
“This Companion provides amazingly wide coverage on
contemporary Japan. What's more, it challenges the very idea of
anthropology in interesting ways. Although written by experts in
the field, it will be of such great interest to students and others
new to the field that it may well spark the imagination of the next
Ruth Benedict in the making.”
Kazue Muta, Osaka University
“A Companion to the Anthropology of Japan is a rich
collection by Japanese and international researchers that
demystifies Japanese culture and society. Challenging static and
ahistorical perceptions of Japan, it ranges widely across space and
time to provide an innovative and critical study of minorities,
gender, culture, education, family, ritual, citizenship, and
more.”
Mark Selden, Binghamton and Cornell
Universities
"This is without doubt a creative, informative, and
conscientiously argued book from which anthropologists and other
students of Japan will have much to learn."
Current Anthropology