The Cambridge Companion to Modern Japanese Culture, edited by Yoshio Sugimoto, is a compendium of nineteen essays by scholars based in Australia, Japan, the United States, England, and Austria. Part of Cambridge University Press's expanding series of modern culture “companions,” the book is a welcome supplement to Sugimoto's own widely used Introduction to Japanese Culture, which has been in print since 1997 and is now in its third edition (Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010). The contributors collectively speak to Sugimoto's argument, articulated in his opening essay, “‘Japanese culture’: An overview,” that “[a]n unacknowledged paradigm shift appears to be underway in contemporary Japanese culture, with public discourse suddenly focusing upon internal divisions and variations in the population” (p. 1). Each of the individual chapters “reflects. . . the ‘multicultural model’ of Japanese society, and highlights the ways in which Japanese culture is diversified and stratified along class,...
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Book Review|
May 01 2012
The Cambridge Companion to Modern Japanese Culture Available to Purchase
The Cambridge Companion to Modern Japanese Culture
. Edited by Yoshio Sugimoto. Cambridge; New York
: Cambridge University Press
, 2009
. xv, 413 pp. $95.00 (cloth); $29.99 (paper).
Barbara E. Thornbury
Barbara E. Thornbury
Temple University
Search for other works by this author on:
Journal of Asian Studies (2012) 71 (2): 553–555.
Citation
Barbara E. Thornbury; The Cambridge Companion to Modern Japanese Culture. Journal of Asian Studies 1 May 2012; 71 (2): 553–555. doi: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021911812000423
Download citation file:
Advertisement
52
Views