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This collection presents twenty-seven new essays in Japanese aesthetics by leading experts in the field. Beginning with an extended foreword by the renowned scholar and artist Stephen Addiss and a comprehensive introduction that surveys the history of Japanese aesthetics and the ways in which it is similar to and different from Western aesthetics, this groundbreaking work brings together a large variety of disciplinary perspectives—including philosophy, literature, and cultural politics—to shed light on the artistic and aesthetic traditions of Japan and the central themes in Japanese art and aesthetics. Contributors explore topics from the philosophical groundings for Japanese aesthetics and the Japanese aesthetics of imperfection and insufficiency to the Japanese love of and respect for nature and the paradoxical ability of Japanese art and culture to absorb enormous amounts of foreign influence and yet maintain its own unique identity. New Essays in Japanese Aesthetics will appeal not only to a wide range of humanities scholars but also to graduate and undergraduate students of Japanese aesthetics, art, philosophy, literature, culture, and civilization. Masterfully articulating the contributors’ Japanese-aesthetical concerns and their application to Japanese arts (including literature, theater, film, drawing, painting, calligraphy, ceramics, crafts, music, fashion, comics, cooking, packaging, gardening, landscape architecture, flower arrangement, the martial arts, and the tea ceremony), these engaging and penetrating essays will also appealto nonacademic professionals and general audiences. This seminal work will be essential reading for anyone interested in gaining a deeper understanding of Japanese aesthetics.
Published | Dec 29 2017 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 526 |
ISBN | 9780739180815 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Illustrations | 23 b/w photos; |
Dimensions | 238 x 159 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Aesthetic concerns permeate Japanese culture; thus, a comprehensive understanding of Japanese culture requires a comprehensive understanding of Japanese aesthetics. Nguyen achieves just that in this collection. The volume opens with two introductory essays: an excellent overview of central Japanese aesthetic concepts, practices, and their histories by Yuriko Saito, and a comprehensive overview of contents by Nguyen and the contributors to the volume. The 27 original essays are divided into six parts, each covering Japanese aesthetics in combination with another topic, namely philosophy, culture, cultural politics, literature, visual arts, and the legacy of Kuki Shuzo, author of "Iki" no ko¯zo¯ (The Structure of Iki), 1930, regarded as the most important book on Japanese aesthetics of the 20th century. The strengths of this volume are many, and included among them are its breadth and depth, its deft engagement with both contemporary and historical concepts and issues, and its cross-cultural (East and West) nature. With regard to the last, Western philosophers are used to helping readers understand the Japanese concepts, and Japanese concepts are used to explore issues not usually treated in Western philosophy. This rich cultural/historical reciprocity permeates the book. This reviewer came away with the feeling that a lifetime could fruitfully and joyfully be spent studying this text. Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates and above.
Choice Reviews
“New Essays in Japanese Aesthetics is therefore an invaluable addition to the specific topic at hand, and to the larger field of Japanese studies…. astute … insightful … groundbreaking … In sum, New Essays in Japanese Aesthetics is a major contribution to Japanese studies. It widens the opportunity for non-Japanese specialists to engage with the paradox that is aesthetics itself, and not Japan as a topos. Chapters in the volume will surely intrigue scholars in many disciplines, as well as students, graduate and undergraduate alike.”
Japanese Language and Literature
This anthology takes us to places Western aesthetics never dreams to go, to taking tea, wrapping boxes, going to war, and seeing martial art as a moral discipline. The conglomeration of articles reflects the complexity and contradictoriness of Japanese history and culture…. The countries of the world, newly bound by the coronavirus, have, I would say, an obligation to get to know each other, and this book helps us get to know Japan by giving us a sense of the breadth and depth of its culture…. [A]esthetics has become global and, therefore, the book under review is important and welcome to Western readers.
Contemporary Philosophy
A. Minh Nguyen has done a superb editorial service to the book’s readers and made possible a genuinely valuable contribution to the field of Japanese aesthetics. As a whole, the essays are eclectic, enlightening, and educational; they succeed in fulfilling the editor’s claim that the book will “appeal not only to a wide range of humanities scholars but also to graduate and undergraduate students of Japanese aesthetics, art, philosophy, literature, culture, and civilization” (p. xxvi). Individually, the majority of essays make rigorous and enthralling contributions to the literature. In the case of this reviewer, the book reaffirmed, stimulated, and deepened the knowledge and love of Japanese art and culture. New Essays in Japanese Aesthetics will have a like effect in most readers should they adopt the slightest beginner’s mind. In sum, this edited collection speaks to and is witness of the vibrant field of Japanese aesthetics today. No doubt, it will be a point of reference for many years to come.
Philosophy East and West
This book is probably the most notable contribution in English to the field of Japanese aesthetics published in this century so far and one of the most significant in the past fifty years.
The Journal of Japanese Studies
The book under review and its editor Minh Nguyen have garnered well-deserved praise for what is certainly the most comprehensive recent collection on Japanese aesthetics for an English readership. Throughout its 27 exceptional essays, leading scholars discuss the most salient Japanese aesthetic practices and concepts, often explored in concert with Western philosophies. The editor has done a commendable job arranging the numerous works into six relevant sections, yet these by no means exhaust the array of topics readers will find treated in-depth throughout the volume’s over 400 pages. A great virtue of the collection is that, as the reader proceeds from one essay to the next, additional thematic resonances multiply, thus disclosing still further richness within and between each of the chapters.
Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy
This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.
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