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Memories of Silk and Straw: A Self-Portrait of Small-Town Japan

Memories of Silk and Straw: A Self-Portrait of Small-Town Japan

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Author: Junichi Saga
Publisher: Kodansha International
Category: Book

List Price: $19.00
Buy Used: $7.31
You Save: $11.69 (62%)



New (4) Used (17) Collectible (2) from $7.31

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 457090

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 260
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.6 x 0.9

ISBN: 0870119885
Dewey Decimal Number: 952
EAN: 9780870119880
ASIN: 0870119885

Publication Date: June 15, 1990
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Inventory subject to prior sale. Used items have varying degrees of wear, highlighting, etc. and may not include supplements such as infotrac or other web access codes. Expedited orders cannot be sent to PO Box. Sorry, not able to ship to APO, FPO, Alaska, and Hawaii.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Memories of Silk and Straw: A Self-Portrait of Small-Town Japan
  • Unknown Binding - Memories of silk and straw: A self-portrait of small-town Japan

Similar Items:

  • Everyday Life in Traditional Japan (Tuttle Classics of Japanese Literature)
  • Modern Japan
  • Japan faces the World, 1925-1952 (Seminar Studies in History Series)
  • Oracle Bones: A Journey Through Time in China (P.S.)
  • Son of the Revolution

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Over 50 reminiscences of pre-modern Japan-illustrations of a way of life that has virtually disappeared. Voted "Best Book of the Year" by Japan's foreign press.
This is a collective biography, based on interviews taped by a small-town doctor, recording the lives of a cotton dyer, blacksmith, tofu maker, undertaker, carter, tenant farmer, local gangster, casual laborer, horse-meat butcher, magistrate's wife, apprentice geisha, rice merchant, thatcher, carpenter, midwife, county hangman, pawnbroker, draper, fisherman, hairdresser, servant, charcoal burner, and so on-over fifty in all. Their memories are all related to a lakeside town and its rural suburbs northeast of Tokyo.
Born in the early years of this century, these people have both seen the old Japan and lived through the changes brought about by modernization and the onset of affluence. In a real sense, they provide the sole surviving links with a feudal way of life and its attitudes which have altered, in the space of fifty years or so, beyond recognition.
Through plain-spoken anecdote-their voices by turns amused, nostalgic, disturbing but unsensational-they describe their youth in a tougher world where poverty was commonplace, where unwanted children were sometimes "thinned out'' at birth, where poorer families cooked out-of-doors and fishermen in summer went almost naked. By saving their memories for posterity, the author hoped to close, just a fraction, the gap in perception between a traditional past and the Japan we know today. The result-as the distinguished anthropologist, Ronald Dore, says in his preface-is "a book to savor, and a book to learn from."
These reminiscences are accompanied by illustrations painted by the author's father, Dr. Susumu Saga-themselves a record of an old man's past.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars far away and not so long ago   December 13, 2006
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

This book is filled with priceless historic snapshots of real-life everyday drama that cannot be found in any textbook. From farmers, fishermen, and merchants to executioners and geishas who entertained kamikaze pilots in the last days of their lives, these simple, unadorned memories of ordinary smalltown Japanese people living in a previous era under circumstances that we in modern, high-tech times cannot imagine left me in awe of the power of the human body and spirit. A learning experience in culture and history that reinforces how valuable the memories of our own elders are.


5 out of 5 stars well written and interesting.   June 26, 2006
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

A collection of interviews with people who tell stories of their lives in a small japanese village from about 1890 to 1930. Arranged by occupation, all are very interesting. One of the most intriguing aspects of the book is the commonality the stories share with my own American relatives (as to the hardships of farm life, what people did for fun, etc.). The book even occasionally slips into a "when I was a kid we had to walk two miles uphill in the snow" sort of mode, but this makes many of the stories all the more touching.


5 out of 5 stars A vanished world   October 29, 2004
 13 out of 13 found this review helpful

This is a factual book in which a world that no longer exists becomes vividly real as seen through a provincial doctor's elderly patients recollections of their younger lives. My first introduction to this book came through my Japanese language teacher. Her physician is the son of the author. Each chapter covers the recollections of a single patient, so the book is very easily read in discreet portraits which together paint the overall picture. Dr Saga's patients tell their stories with such intimacy, warmth and frankness that you are drawn ever deeper into their world. All lived in and around Tsuchiura, a town on the edge of a large lake about 30 miles north of Tokyo. Many of the stories are of fishermen who made their living from the lake. There are also the merchants, gangsters and entertainers. Together, these people provide a real insight into the way people lived and worked in Japan before the rapid development of the latter half of the 20th century produced the comfortable lifestyles of today.


5 out of 5 stars Memories of Silk and Straw   February 11, 2001
 12 out of 12 found this review helpful

One of the best books about pre-war Japan. Each story brings to life a different aspect of life, culture, and class as they existed before the war. If you've visited Japan, you'll have a hard time believing this kind of world ever existed. I guarantee you won't be able to put it down.


5 out of 5 stars Excellent 1st person accounts of pre-war japan   February 2, 1999
 15 out of 15 found this review helpful

1st person accounts collected by a Tsuchiura doctor from elderly Japanese. Together, they piece together a quiltwork of Japanese society from the bottom on up. All, in pre-war Japan. Tsuchiura is just next door to Tsukuba, a modern science city and destination for many foreign researchers in Japan. As one such researcher, the book helped me understand some seemingly unexplainable remnants of old practices that still persist. I couldn't put the book down. The stories of lives jump out of the pages.


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