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Enfolding Silence
Brett J. Esaki
其他書名
The Transformation of Japanese American Religion and Art under Oppression
出版
Oxford University Press
, 2016-05-02
主題
Religion / Theology
Gardening / Japanese Gardens
Religion / Comparative Religion
ISBN
0190612657
9780190612658
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=gAoRDAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
This book demonstrates how Japanese Americans have developed traditions of complex silences to survive historic moments of racial and religious oppression and how they continue to adapt these traditions today. Brett Esaki offers four case studies of Japanese American art-gardening, origami, jazz, and monuments-and examines how each artistic practice has responded to a historic moment of oppression. He finds that these artistic silences incorporate and convey obfuscated and hybridized religious ideas from Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Shinto, indigenous religions, and contemporary spirituality. While silence is often thought of as the binary opposite and absence of sound, Esaki offers a theory of non-binary silence that articulates how multidimensional silences are formed and how they function. He argues that non-binary silences have allowed Japanese Americans to disguise, adapt, and innovate religious resources in order to negotiate racism and oppressive ideologies from both the United States and Japan. Drawing from the fields of religious studies, ethnic studies, theology, anthropology, art, music, history, and psychoanalysis, this book highlights the ways in which silence has been used to communicate the complex emotions of historical survival, religious experience, and artistic inspiration.