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Japanese Family: Touch, Intimacy and Feeling

Contributor(s): Tahhan, Diana Adis (Author)

ISBN: 9781138079434

Publisher: Routledge

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Pub Date: May 10, 2017

Dewey: 306.850952

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Illustrated

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.40" H x 9.21" L x 6.14" W ( 0.59 lbs) 184 pages

Series: Japan Anthropology Workshop

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: This book explores how the relationship between child and parent develops in Japan, from the earliest point in a child's life, through the transition from family to the wider world, first to playschools and then schools. It relates the position in Japan to theoretical writing, in both Japan and the West, on body, mind, intimacy and feeling, and compares the position in Japan to practices elsewhere. Overall, the book makes a significant contribution to the study of and theories on body practices, and to debates on the processes of socialisation in Japan.

Review Quotes:

'[The Japanese Family] provides a superb, empirically rich, addition to our understanding not only of this specific society but of intimacy and closeness as conceptual tools for analyzing human relations in general. In addition, it draws upon both Japanese sociologies of emotions and those produced in the English-using academic world to propose innovative ways of looking at this special character of relationships. In this rich and sophisticated ethnography Diana thus seeks to explore how the visceral touch between bodies is related to the other types of closeness transmitted not necessarily through actual bodily contact. [...] Diana's ethnography offers us a new way of looking at families and inter-personal relations, and at intimacy and feeling. Readers are invited into the special, at times magical, world of intimacy and closeness.' - Eyal Ben-Ari, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel

Threaded through Tahhan's book are understandings of relationality, intimacy, and connectedness as exclusively positive, equitable, and inclusive. Her book represents an ambitious project to examine the daily practices that constitute familial intimacy without continued physical contact between family members. - Kathryn E. GOLDFARB, McMaster University

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