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The Zen Arts: An Anthropological Study of the Culture of Aesthetic Form in Japan (Royal Asiatic Society Books)
 
 
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The Zen Arts: An Anthropological Study of the Culture of Aesthetic Form in Japan (Royal Asiatic Society Books) [Hardcover]

Rupert Cox (Author)

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Book Description

0700714758 978-0700714759 January 7, 2003
The tea ceremony and the martial arts are intimately linked in the popular and historical imagination with Zen Buddhism, and Japanese culture. They are commonly interpreted as religio-aesthetic pursuits which express core spiritual values through bodily gesture and the creation of highly valued objects. Ideally, the experience of practising the Zen arts culminates in enlightenment.
This book challenges that long-held view and proposes that the Zen arts should be understood as part of a literary and visual history of representing Japanese culture through the arts. Cox argues that these texts and images emerged fully as systems for representing the arts during the modern period, produced within Japan as a form of cultural nationalism and outside Japan as part of an orientalist discourse.
Practitioners' experiences are in fact rarely referred to in terms of Zen or art, but instead are spatially and socially grounded. Combining anthropological description with historical criticism, Cox shows that the Zen arts are best understood in terms of a dynamic relationship between an aesthetic discourse on art and culture and the social and embodied experiences of those who participate in them.

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About the Author

Rupert A. Cox is a member of the Department of Anthroplogy and the European Japan Research Centre, Oxford Brookes University.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This book is about that community of individuals who practise a group of activities sometimes referred to in English as the 'Zen arts', and addresses the idea, that these activities are aesthetic expressions of 'Japanese culture'. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mori Sensei, Doshin So, Zen Buddhism, Daisetzu Suzuki, Edward Said, Victor Turner, Bernard Faure, Port Island, Roland Barthes, Christine Guth, Favret Saada, Kakuzo Okakura, Masuda Takashi, Motoori Norinaga, Oscar Wilde, Said's Orientalism, Walter Benjamin, Yasuo Yuasa
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