2007:
65, 66,
67,
68
2006:
62, 63,
64
2005:
59, 60,
61
2004: 56,
57,
58,
2003: 53, 54,
55
2002: 50,
51, 52
2001: 46,
47,
48,49
2000: 43, 44,
45,
1999: 39,
40, 41, 42
1998: 37,
38
1997: 33, 34, 35,
36
1996: 31, 32,
1995: 28, 29, 30,
1994: 25, 26, 27
1993: 22, 23, 24
1992: 20, 21
1991: 16, 17, 18, 19
1990: 13, 14,
15
1989: 9, 10, 11, 12
1988: 5, 6, 7, 8
1987: 1, 2, 3, 4
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INAKA:
the Japanese Countryside
A Kyoto Journal Bookzine
The Japanese
archipelago comprises roughly 7,000 islands, stretching over 3,000
kilometers, and over 60% of its land surface consists of mountains
and volcanoes. Farming land accounts for only 13% of the total
area, squeezing human habitation into a mere 4.5%. Over 80% of
Japan's population now lives in cities, and more than 60% of Japan's
food is imported. So ...who needs the inaka anyway, these
days?
"Thank god
for all the city folk, who leave the countryside to us" is Robert
Brady's view. Nakashima Tadashi says "Down With Cities!"
and Meredith McKinney tells city-dwelling tourists where
to go. Tadayoshi Himeda, an ethnographer film-maker talks
about his 40 years shooting documentaries on local festivals,
while Shigeo Iwamoto talks about his lifelong pursuit,
shooting bears. Taishi Hirokawa puts famous fashion-designer
costumes on country folks and shoots them "Sonomama". Rollie
Innes-Taylor gives his perspective, from a sea-kayak circumnavigating
the archipelago; Isabella Bird takes tempests, landslides
and floods in her stride, travelling "unbeaten tracks" to Yezo
in 1878.
Hirokawa
Taishi photographs country landscapes dotted with nuclear
power plants; Gavan
McCormack reports on the Nakaumi dam scheme, which is
replacing some of Japan's richest waters with expensive and superfluous
farmland, Toshio Sibata rambles the wilds photodocumenting
Japan's best rural concrete for the Japan Society of Engineers,
Joshua Rome slams agri-chemicals, and David Kubiak
slams COP3. Tim Groves gets local election fever; Bruce
Allen soliloquizes on patriotism (finding Maine and Hokkaido
aren't that far apart). Nanao Sakaki discovers the National
Butterfly of Japan, Royall Tyler hangs out with Shining
Prince Genji in pre-quake, pre-Kobe Akashi; guest co-editor
Jeffrey Irish introduces people he got to know working
as a fisherman on an island off Kyushu, including Dr Kenjiro
Setoue, whose journal extracts are included.
Sally McLaren
finds out about foreign brides for present-day back-country farmers;
Carole Koda records family reminiscences about mail-order
Japanese brides and Japanese farming life in Southern California
since the early 1900s; Hosui Fukuda reinvigorates an almost
lost form of country ceramics; Stephen Kohler visits lost
and restored villages....and Pico Iyer self-administers
the Haiti Test, looking for the Global Village. Other articles
and photo-essays explore country food, festivals, folksongs, and
fishing...
2,500
yen / US$25 |
Theme
Issues
Street, Just Deeds,
Transience, Media
in Asia, Time, Transforming Conflict, Inaka,
Orthodoxy & Heresy, Word, Sacred Mountains of Asia, The Death & Resurrection of Kyoto, Radicalism of Cultural Continuity, Neighborhoods, Allure
of the Exotic, Kyoto
Speaks, Eros, Japan in the Year 2020
Subscriptions
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