1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910814686103321

Autore

White Merry

Titolo

Coffee Life in Japan / / Merry White

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Berkeley, CA : , : University of California Press, , [2012]

©2012

ISBN

1-280-11681-1

9786613521101

0-520-95248-0

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (238 pages)

Collana

California Studies in Food and Culture ; ; 36

Disciplina

641.3/3730952

Soggetti

Coffee - Social aspects - Japan

Coffee -- Social aspects -- Japan

Coffeehouses -- Social aspects -- Japan

Coffeehouses - Social aspects - Jpaan

Japan - Social life and customs

Japan -- Social life and customs

Popular culture - Japan

Popular culture -- Japan

Coffeehouses - Social aspects - Japan

Anthropology

Social Sciences

Manners & Customs

Japan Social life and customs

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Preface -- Chapter 1. Coffee in Public: Cafés in Urban Japan -- Chapter 2. Japan's Cafés: Coffee and the Counterintuitive -- Chapter 3. Modernity and the Passion Factory -- Chapter 4. Masters of Their Universes: Performing Perfection -- Chapter 5. Japan's Liquid Power -- Chapter 6. Making Coffee Japanese: Taste in the Contemporary Café -- Chapter 7. Urban Public Culture: Webs, Grids, and Third Places in Japanese Cities --



Chapter 8. Knowing Your Place -- Appendix: Visits to Cafés, an Unreliable Guide -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Acknowledgments -- Index

Sommario/riassunto

This fascinating book-part ethnography, part memoir-traces Japan's vibrant café society over one hundred and thirty years. Merry White traces Japan's coffee craze from the turn of the twentieth century, when Japan helped to launch the Brazilian coffee industry, to the present day, as uniquely Japanese ways with coffee surface in Europe and America. White's book takes up themes as diverse as gender, privacy, perfectionism, and urbanism. She shows how coffee and coffee spaces have been central to the formation of Japanese notions about the uses of public space, social change, modernity, and pleasure. White describes how the café in Japan, from its start in 1888, has been a place to encounter new ideas and experiments in thought, behavior, sexuality , dress, and taste. It is where a person can be socially, artistically, or philosophically engaged or politically vocal. It is also, importantly, an urban oasis, where one can be private in public.