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Making Tea Japanese

Surak, Kristin

Authors



Contributors

Rupert Cox
Editor

Christoph Brumann
Editor

Abstract

This chapter explores the relationship between heritage and ethnicity construction in diasporic contexts by examining how the tea ceremony in the US can facilitate a sense of Japaneseness. This is accomplished by (1) explicitly marking Japaneseness through ethnic contrasts, (2) forging commonalities within implicit ethnic boundaries, and (3) providing a channel for non-ethnic accomplishments such as developing social status. In conclusion, the chapter highlights the continuities in the way that tea is marked as Japanese not only in the diaspora, but also in the homeland. It also stresses the important of not reading everything through the lens of ethnic identity. The tea ceremony can be more or less “ethnic” depending on the situation and may not always express Japaneseness.

Citation

Surak, K. (2011). Making Tea Japanese. In R. Cox, & C. Brumann (Eds.), Making Japanese Heritage (21-30). Routledge

Publication Date Jan 1, 2011
Deposit Date Feb 11, 2014
Publisher Routledge
Pages 21-30
Book Title Making Japanese Heritage
ISBN 9780415673679
Keywords ethnicity, diaspora, tea ceremony, Japan