Japanese tea culture the heart and form of Chanoyu

"Why is the tea-room entrance, or nijiriguchi, so narrow? How did the practice of "passing the bowl," or mawashinomi, come about? And what hidden meaning lies behind the ritual purification of hands and mouth, or chōzu? Chanoyu, the art of preparing tea, developed against a backdrop o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kumakura, Isao
Corporate Author: Shuppan Bunka Sangyō Shinkō Zaidan
Other Authors: McClintock, Martha Jane (Translator)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Tokyo, Japan Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture 2023, 2023©2021
Edition:First English edition
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: JSTOR Open Access Books - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Description
Summary:"Why is the tea-room entrance, or nijiriguchi, so narrow? How did the practice of "passing the bowl," or mawashinomi, come about? And what hidden meaning lies behind the ritual purification of hands and mouth, or chōzu? Chanoyu, the art of preparing tea, developed against a backdrop of social turmoil in late medieval Japan. Through the singular figure of Sen no Rikyū, it found expression as wabi-cha, or wabi tea, the foundation of Japanese tea culture today. Here, scholar and curator Kumakura Isao investigates the unique cultural value of tea. He examines its rituals and behaviors, elaborates its structure, spaces, and style, and delves into the history of everything from the tea whisk to the tea room itself. Drawing on folklore studies and performing-arts history, Kumakura develops a new perspective on Japan's culture of tea."
Item Description:First published in Japanese in 1977
Physical Description:239 pages illustrations