An Anthropologist in Japan is a highly personal narrative which provides unique insights into many elements of Japanese life.
PART I Settling in and making contacts 1 Arrival...and an invitation 2 The neighbourhood: a 'world of blossom and willow' 3 The hospital...and a strange encounter 4 The school...and a fight 5 A pilgrims' trail 6 Shiroyama, the Satomi legend and a new look at power PART II Events to attend 7 Wrapping the body: two local festivals 8 The housewives' 'Club for Life' 9 Cubs, sports and a shock 10 Suicide, funerals and the well-wrapped gift 11 Paper walls and flowers at the bank PART III The role of experts 12 A foreigner at the 'Culture Festival' 13 'Your Japanese is psychological torture' 14 A volcanic eruption 15 Tennis and the 'surreal' dinner 16 Concerts, cakes and spiritual communication PART IV Building a framework for analysis 17 New Year: shrine, mochi and a tea ceremony 18 Valentine's Day, and the 6th years pick on Hamish 19 The gang-leader's wife 20 Unwrapping the argument 21 An artistic farewell
Joy Hendry is Professor of Social Anthropology at Oxford Brookes University. She has published numerous books and articles on Japan, including Wrapping Culture (1993), Understanding Japanese Society (Routledge, 1993) and Interpreting Japanese Society (ed.) (Routledge, 1998).