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Asian Studies - East Asia - Japan, Japanese History - General & Miscellaneous, Death, Grief & Bereavement, Asia - Civilization, Religious Inspiration - General, Coping & Healing
Bereavement and Consolation: Testimonies from Tokugawa Japan by Harold Bolitho β€” book cover

Bereavement and Consolation: Testimonies from Tokugawa Japan

by Harold Bolitho
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Overview

Death came early and often to the people of Tokugawa Japan, as it did to the rest of the pre-modern world. Yet the Japanese reaction to death struck foreign observers and later scholars as particularly subdued. In this pioneering study, Harold Bolitho translates and analyzes some extraordinary accounts written by three Japanese men of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries about the death of a loved one-testimonies that challenge the impression that the Japanese accepted their bereavements with nonchalance. The three accounts were written by a young Buddhist priest mourning the death of his child, by the poet Issa, who recorded his father's final illness, and by a scholar and teacher who described his wife's losing struggle with diabetes. Placing their journals in the context of contemporary religious beliefs, customs and literary traditions, Bolitho offers provocative insights into a previously hidden world of Japanese grief.

Author Biography: Harold Bolitho is professor of Japanese history in the department of East Asian Languages and Civilization at Harvard University.

Synopsis

Death came early and often to the people of Tokugawa Japan, as it did to the rest of the pre-modern world. Yet the Japanese reaction to death struck foreign observers and later scholars as particularly subdued. In this pioneering study, Harold Bolitho translates and analyzes some extraordinary accounts written by three Japanese men of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries about the death of a loved one-testimonies that challenge the impression that the Japanese accepted their bereavements with nonchalance. The three accounts were written by a young Buddhist priest mourning the death of his child, by the poet Issa, who recorded his father's final illness, and by a scholar and teacher who described his wife's losing struggle with diabetes. Placing their journals in the context of contemporary religious beliefs, customs and literary traditions, Bolitho offers provocative insights into a previously hidden world of Japanese grief.

Author Biography: Harold Bolitho is professor of Japanese history in the department of East Asian Languages and Civilization at Harvard University.

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Book Details

Published
October 1, 2003
Publisher
Yale University Press
Pages
248
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780300097986

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