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         Okakura Kakuzo:     more detail
  1. The book of tea. With foreword & biographical sketch by Elise Grilli by Kakuzo (1862-1913) Okakura, 1962-01-01
  2. The Book Of Tea by Okakura Kakuzo 1862-1913, 2010-10-15
  3. The book of tea by Okakura-Kakuzo. by Okakura. Kakuzo. 1862-1913., 1921-01-01
  4. The awakening of Japan. by Okakura-Kakuzo by Okakura. Kakuzo. 1862-1913., 1921-01-01
  5. The book of tea. by Okakura-Kakuzo. by Okakura. Kakuz{macr}o. 1862-1913., 1906-01-01
  6. The awakening of Japan by Okakura-Kakuzo. by Okakura. Kakuz{macr}o. 1862-1913., 1904-01-01
  7. Japanese Painting and National Identity: Okakura Tenshin and His Circle (Michigan Monograph Series in Japanese Studies) by Victoria Weston, 2003-01

21. Zaadz Quotes By Author - Kakuzo Okakura Quotes
Kakuzo Okakura (18621913) Japanese art historian, author from Okakura in TheBook of Tea. More quotes about Art, Drinking, Life, Religion
http://zaadz.com/quotes/authors/kakuzo_okakura/
what's a zaad? bookmark us send feedback Quote Size: All Short Tall Grande Venti
Famous Quotes by Kakuzo Okakura
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1. "Tea with us became more than an idealization of the form of drinking; it is a religion of the art of life."

22. Asian
Okakura, Kakuzo, 18621913 The Book of Tea Gutenberg FTP UITXT 116 Kb -ZIP46 Kb SLTXT - ZIP ENTXT - ZIP. Soseki, Natsume (1867-1916) considered the
http://www.saxakali.com/youth/asian1.htm
Asian
Home
links Asians and South Asians Saxakali links Asia Society Zhongwen.com Chinese Characters and Culture The Displaced Japanese-Americans by American Council on Public Affairs (frame-dependent page images at MSU) Japanese AmericansEvacuation and Relocation,1942-1945 (frame-dependent page images at MSU) online books by author Blood, Peter , ed.: Pakistan: A Country Study (HTML at LOC) Buddha The Gospel (Vt.edu) The Word (Vt.edu) Confucius Lady Daibu 12th century Japanese poet; a selection from her memoirs, with historical and critical notes by Lloyd Daub Far, Sui Sin:
A Chinese Ishmael 1899 [Illustrations] (23 KB) A Love Story From the Rice Fields of China 1911 (15 KB) The Bird of Love 1910 (16 KB) An Autumn Fan August 1910 (15 KB) Chan Hen Yen, Chinese Student

23. IngentaConnect Charles Longfellow And Okakura Kakuzo: Cultural Cross-Dressing In
Keywords Longfellow, Charles Appleton,; Okakura, Kakuzo, 18621913; Photography Social aspects.; Clothing and dress Social aspects.
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/dup/pos/2000/00000008/00000003/art00002

24. Kakuzo Okakura - EBooks - New Releases!
Kakuzo Okakura eBooks. Kakuzo Okakura Now Available! Okakura Kakuzo (1862-1913)devoted his life to teaching, art, Zen, and the preservation of Japanese
http://www.ebookmall.com/alpha-authors/Kakuzo-Okakura.htm

Kakuzo Okakura eBooks
Kakuzo Okakura
Kakuzo Okakura eBooks Kakuzo Okakura eBooks
Kakuzo Okakura - Now Available!

Okakura Kakuzo (1862-1913) devoted his life to teaching, art, Zen, and the preservation of Japanese art and culture, working as an ambassador, teacher, writer, and, at the time of his death, as the Curator fo Chinese and Japanese Art at the Boston Museum. The Book of Tea The Book of Tea Many more eBook titles
Bookmark this page and visit again to view more titles.
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25. Global Oriental - Japan And East Asia Books - Japanese Propaganda - Selected Rea
Okakura Kakuzo Tenshin (18621913) The Awakening of Japan (1904). Japan s innatevirility selections from Okakura and Nitobe (1943). VOLUME 3
http://www.globaloriental.co.uk/book.asp?Title_ID=2

26. A Tribute To Hinduism - Quotes On Hinduism 201-220
Professor Kakuzo Okakura (18621913) a Japanese philosopher, art expert, curatorand author of The Book of Tea and The Ideals of the East, with Special
http://www.atributetohinduism.com/quotes201_220.htm
h o m e q u o t e s o n h i n d u i s m 201- 220 c o n t e n t s Show in alphabetical order Professor Kakuzo Okakura a Japanese philosopher, art expert, curator and author of The Book of Tea and The Ideals of the East, with Special Reference to the Art of Japan says: "We catch a glimpse of the great river of science which never ceases to flow in India. For India has carried and scattered the data of intellectual progress for the whole world, ever since the pre-Buddhist period when she produced the Sankhya philosophy and the atomic theory; the fifth century, when her mathematics and astronomy find their blossom in Arya Bhatta; the seventh when Brahmagupta uses his highly-developed Algebra and makes astronomical observations; the twelfth, brilliant with the glory of Bhaskaracharya, and his famous daughter, down to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries themselves with Ram Chandra the mathematician and Jagdish Chandra Bose the physicist. Okakura adds that in this scientific age: India had faith "Such a faith in its early energy and enthusiasm was the natural incentive to that great scientific age which was to produce astronomers like Aryabhatta, discovering the revolution of the earth on its own axis, and his not less illustrious successor Varamihira; who brought Hindu medicine to its height, perhaps under Susruta; and which finally gave to Arabia the knowledge with which she was later to fructify Europe.

27. Quiet Beauty: Exhibition On Asianart.com
In this respect he resembled Okakura Kakuzo (18621913), the polemical style ofwhose later writings made him one of the more notable players in the game of
http://www.asianart.com/exhibitions/quietbeauty/intro.html
Asianart.com Exhibitions
Quiet Beauty Exhibition
Catalogue
Cultural Identity and Japanese Studio Ceramics
Rupert Faulkner At the start not just of a new century but of a new millennium, there is a certain poignancy in being presented with the outcome of a single individual's journey through five thousand years of one of the great ceramic cultures of the world. Jeffrey Montgomery has built up his collection over a long period of time, sifting and distilling from the many thousands of works he has encountered a highly personal selection that reflects a particular and deeply felt aesthetic. Each piece, one knows, has been carefully and lovingly chosen. It has spent months or years interacting with and defining the private spaces of his everyday life, being repeatedly put away, taken out, redisplayed, and reassessed. Collecting is an act of creative dislocation, a removal of an object from the context or contexts in which it has hitherto functioned, followed by its recasting according to the passions and enthusiasms of its new owner. For a collector to commit their collection to public scrutiny is a subsequent and different act of dislocation in which alternative agendas are imposed on subgroups of artifacts selected by outside curators and other third parties. Some collectors revel in the spotlight that is brought to bear on them as a result of making their collections available in this way. Others are more hesitant, wary of the intrusion into their privacy-fearful even of the threat of their collection being somehow defiled-that public exposure can be felt to bring.

28. Liste Af Tebøger +246booklist+
Written in English by Okakura Kakuzo (aka Okakura Tsenting) (18621913) duringa year-long stay in New York. CM Translated into Japanese in 1927.
http://www.246.dk/booklist.html
S A D M ... Tebøger
Liste af tebøger
Note: September 7, 2005 Birger Nielsen bnielsen@daimi.au.dk , drinker of tea
This document: http://www.246.dk/booklist.html

29. Tea Book List +246teabooks+
Written in English by Okakura Kakuzo (aka Okakura Tsenting) (18621913) duringa year-long stay in New York. Translated into Japanese in 1927.
http://www.246.dk/teabooks.html
S A D M ... Book-list
Tea Book List
This is a list of books, that I own, have borrowed or seen described on the net. Plus books mentioned in these books. As I have read many of these books myself, I've added a description of some of them. Some of the descriptions may be identical to what others have posted in the past, but if so, the fact that you find them here means that I agree with the description. Exceptions to this will be clearly attributed to the original author.
5000 years of Tea, a Pictorial Companion
by Derek Maitland
Hong Kong: CFW Publications, Ltd., 130 Connaught Road Central, 1982
Delightful coffee table book, nice illustrations, much information about the history of tea. 143 pages.
A Basis for Tea Selection
by C. P. Cohen Stuart
Buitenzorg Research Station, Indonesia, 1919.
A Decent Cup of Tea
by Malachi McCormick
Clarkson Potter, New York, 1991 ISBN#: 0-517-58462-X A very personal book written by a person in search of a decent cup of tea. "We can survive functional illiteracy or shattered windows of vulnerability, but not the demise of The Decent Cup of Tea." Contains the usual facts, history etc, but should be read because of the authors very boldly stated opinions. 80 pages by Lesley Mackley Can be ordered from Boyers Coffee Company ($10.95)

30. What Is An Occidental Teahouse?
Okakura Kakuzo (18621913), The Book of Tea. Théceremony de l infusion.Views ofinstallation. 2002. Cagnes-sur-Mer, France. The name, Abode of Fancy,
http://aprille.net/tea/tea-teahouse.html
Choose ... About Exhibition Tea Utensils: Old and New Tea Heart, Tea Mind: Are either a chemical trait? Gallic Perfume: Proust and Tea in French Culture Wabi: the tea esthetic re-examined Temae: Procedure, Performance, Continuity in Change Links Found Materials in Context return to aprille.net home page
Home
Current Project Memory of a guest that lingers... Alchemic Light ... Contact
What exactly is an occidental tea house? In some senses it differs little from a traditional teahouse. The structure is divided into three different hierarchical areas, the host space, the guest space, and a raised alcove for flower and artwork. Yet the native French materials stubtly transform
not only the appearance but the architectural significance of the traditional Japanese elements. Teahouses have never had just one defined architectural form but like snowflakes by the process and function. The word for a teahouse in Japanese is Sukiya. Sukiya can be interpreted as Abode of Fancy or Abode of Vacancy or the Abode of the Unsymmetrical
That the tea-room should be built to suit some individual taste is an enforcement of the principle of vitality in art. Art, to be fully appreciated, must be true to contemporaneous life. It is not that we should ignore the claims of posterity, but that we should seek to enjoy the present more. It is not that we should disregard the creations of the past, but that we should try to assimilate them into our consciousness. Slavish conformity to traditions and formulas fetters the expression of individuality in architecture. ... Would that we loved the ancients more and copied them less! It has been said that the Greeks were great because they never drew from the antique...

31. Food For Thought: Biographies
Okakura Kakuzo (pseudonym Tenshin) (Japanese art critic), 18621913. Okamoto Kido (b.Okamoto Keiji) (Japanese dramatist, critic), 1872-1939
http://www.junkfoodforthought.com/bio/bio_O.htm
Oakeley, Frederick (English ecclesiastic) Oakley, Annie (orig. Phoebe Anne Oakley Moses) (Am. markswoman) Oastler, Richard (English reformer) Oates, Joyce Carol (American writer, playwright, essayist) b.1938 Oates, Lawrence Edward Grace (English antarctic explorer) Oates, Titus (English impostor; fabricated Popish Plot) Obando, Jose Maria (Colombian politician) Oberholtzer, John H. (American Mennonite religious leader) Oberlin, Johann Friedrich (Alsatian pastor, philanthropist) Oberth, Hermann (German rocket scientist) O'Boyle, Patrick Aloysius (American cardinal) Obradovic, Dositej (Serbian writer) Obrecht, Jacob (Dutch conductor, composer, contrapuntist) c.1450-1505 Obregon, Alvaro (Mexican soldier, politician) O'Brien, Conor Cruise (Irish historian, critic, diplomat) b.1917 O'Brien, Edna (Irish writer, playwright, screenwriter) b.1932 O'Brien, Fitz-James (Irish-born American writer, journalist) c.1828-1862 O'Brian, Patrick (orig. Richard Patrick Russ) (Eng. novelist) O'Brien, Edward Joseph Harrington (Am. author, editor, anthol.) O'Brien, Fitz-James (Irish-born American writer)

32. Ernest Fenollosa
He was replaced by his student and fellow buying companion, Okakura Kakuzo (18621913).Fenollosa published Masters of Ukioye, a historical account of
http://www.lib.duke.edu/lilly/artlibry/dah/fenollosae.htm
HName: Fenollosa, Ernest Francisco, Tei-Shin, and Kano Yeitan Masanobu (Japanese names) DateBorn: 1853 Placeborn: Salem, MA Datedied: 1908 Placedied: London, United Kingdom Masters of Ukioye , a historical account of Japanese paintings and color prints which were exhibited at the New York Fine Arts Building, in 1896. In 1897 he journeyed back to Japan to be professor of English literature at the Imperial Normal School at Tokyo. After three years he returned to the United States to write and lecture on Asia. After his death, his wife compiled the two-volume Epochs of Chinese and Japanese Art from his notes. His literary executor, Ezra Pound, compiled from notes and manuscripts, Cathay Certain Noble Plays of Japan (1916); and 'Noh', or, Accomplishment, a Study of the Classical Stage of Japan (1916). His last years were spent creating a collection for the Detroit railroad baron Charles Lang Freer, the basis of what is now the Freer Collection, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. Fenollosa brought a curator's enthusiasm to the study of Asian art in the United States. He inspired Boston collectors to venture into the relatively new field of Far Eastern art, endowing the Boston Museum of Fine Art with one of the earliest and best Asian art collections in the United States. His books were widely read, but unfortunately are full of errors.

33. NEW ACQUISITIONS - JAPANESE STUDIES
Okakura, Kakuzo, 18621913. Nihon bijutsushi. Tokyo Heibonsha, 2001. Lilly 709.52O41, N691, 2001 Omuka, Toshiharu, 1951-
http://www.lib.duke.edu/ias/NewBooks/Japanese/January_2003.htm
duke libraries catalog databases ask a librarian ... contact us JAPANESE STUDIES N ew Acquisitions - January 2003 Guide to Dewey Call Numbers General Bibliography
Religion

Social Sciences

(320s Political Science)
(330s Economics)
(340s Law)
Linguistics

Literature

Public Documents

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... IAS Homepage
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
"Nihongo" no hon zen joho : 92/97.
Tokyo : Nichigai Asoshietsu : Hatsubaimoto Kinokuniya Shoten, 1998. Perkins East Asian Collection 016.4956 N691, 1998 Kyokudo, Konanryo, 1949- Meijiki Osaka no engei sokkibon kiso kenkyu : furoku Tokyo sokkibon mokuroku. Osaka-shi : Taru Shuppan Kabushiki Kaisha, 1994. Perkins East Asian Collection 016.89563 K99, M512, 1994 Kyokudo, Konanryo, 1949- Zoku Meijiki Osaka no engei sokkibon kiso kenkyu. Osaka-shi : Taru Shuppan Kabushiki Kaisha, 2000. Perkins East Asian Collection 016.89563 K99, Z85, 2000 Dokusho annai zoku daijiken o shiru hon.

34. Double Dragon Publishing
Okakura Kakuzo (18621913) devoted his life to teaching, art, Zen, and thepreservation of Japanese art and culture, working as an ambassador, teacher,
http://www.double-dragon-ebooks.com/single.asp?isbn=0-96896-307-2&genre=Philosop

35. Okakura Kakuzo And The Production Of The Japan Discourse In The
Okakura Kakuzo s (18621913) works, published in the first decade of the twentiethcentury both in the United States and Great Britain, sought to address
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/journals/EH/EH39/reinho39.html
Volume Thirty-Nine Essays in History Published by the Corcoran Department of History at the University of Virginia.
Okakura Kakuzo and the Production of the Japan Discourse in the Early Twentieth-Century United States
Christiana Reinhold
Introduction
Okakura Kakuzo's (1862-1913) works, published in the first decade of the twentieth century both in the United States and Great Britain, sought to address the dearth in dependable information about Japan. Okakura is indeed one of the more reliable transmitters of Japanese culture of the time. A renowned and internationally acclaimed collector and historian of the arts of East Asia, Okakura's works, especially The Book of Tea (1905), are still today consulted in regard to matters of Japanese aestheticism. To read Okakura only for his insight into Japanese art, however, is to miss out on an entirely different dimension to Okakura that earned him the designation of being "Japan's first pan-Asian ideologue." Okakura's literary output as well as those products by "Japan experts" that are discussed below, are part of a deluge of books on Japan that were published during and immediately in the wake of the Russo-Japanese War (1904/5). A contemporary reviewer of The Literary Digest (New York) attributed the sudden demand for information about the "Orient," and specifically about Japan, to the long-time interest in and amazement over Japan's rapid modernization.

36. Asia Rearch Institute
ARI Seminar Series 2004 Okakura Kakuzo and Aesthetic Nationalism Prof John Clark Okakura Kakuzô (18621913), also known by his sobriquet Tenshin,
http://www.ari.nus.edu.sg/sem2004/040210.htm
ARI Seminar Series 2004 Okakura Kakuzo and Aesthetic Nationalism Prof John Clark Prof of Art History University of Sydney Date: 10 February 2004, Tuesday Time: 3.00 pm to 4.30 pm Venue: ARI Seminar Room, AS7, #04-09
Abstract
Speaker

http://www.arts.usyd.edu.au/departs/arthistory/
department/general/jclark.html
We would gratefully request that you RSVP with Selvi at tel no.: 6874 1229
email: arikk@nus.edu.sg
ALL ARE WELCOME
Last Updated: 12 Jan 2004 Top

37. The Mad Cybrarian's Library: Free Online E-texts - Authors O-Oz
Okakura, Kakuzo, 18621913; The Book of Tea (Blackmask) - zip (GutenbergText Zip) Gutenberg FTP UITXT 116 Kb - ZIP46 Kb SLTXT - ZIP ENTXT - ZIP
http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/richmond/88/1libo.htm
web hosting domain names photo sharing
The Mad Cybrarian's Library
Authors: O-Oz
O'Brien, Fitz-James: O'Flaherty, Liam O'Keefe, James O'Neill, Eugene: O'Reilly, Augustine J.:
  • Alvira: The Heroine of Vesuvius
Ogden, Ruth:
  • Tattine
Okakura, Kakuzo, 1862-1913
  • The Book of Tea (Blackmask) zip TXT 116 Kb - ZIP 46 Kb SL: TXT ZIP EN: TXT ZIP Olcott, Frances Jenkins: Oldmixon, John: Oliver, Charles Omar Khyyam: 11th century Oppenheim, E. Phillips Optic, Oliver:
  • 38. Dr. Omed's Tent Show Revival
    The Book of Tea, by Okakura Kakuzo (18621913), curator of Japanese and Chineseart at the Museum of Fine Arts , Boston , from 1903 to 1913, was published
    http://blogs.salon.com/0002296/2005/01/03.html

    Dr. Omed's Tent Show Revival

    featuring Dr. Omed's Patented Oil of Prosody and the dancing Elders of the Seventh Day Atheist Aztec Baptist Synod. Fair and Balanced since 8/14/03 00:12AM GMT Last updated:
    8/15/2005; 10:39:16 PM
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    Grendel's Laundry List: Readings from the Book of Tea Those who cannot feel the littleness of great things in them-selves are apt to overlook the greatness of little things in others. Perhaps we reveal ourselves too much in small things because we have so little of the great to conceal. Laotse himself spoke of it thus: “There is a thing which is all containing, which was born before the existence of Heaven and Earth. How silent! How solitary! It stands alone and changes not. It revolves without danger to itself and is the mother of the universe. I do not know its name and so call it the Path. With reluctance I call it the Infinite. Infinity is the Fleeting, the Fleeting is the Vanishing, the Vanishing is the Reverting.” In ethics, the Taoist railed at the laws and the moral codes of society… Definition is always limitation—the “fixed” and the “unchangeless” are but terms expressive of a stoppage of growth. Our standards of morality are begotten of the past needs of society, but is society to remain always the same?

    39. Completed Dissertation List
    (1980); Satoko Tachiki Okakura Kakuzo (18621913) and Boston Brahmins. (1986);Lillian Trettin Traprock Workers The Culture of Work and Risk at an
    http://www.lsa.umich.edu/ac/graduate/disslist.html

    40. Home Page
    by Kakuzo Okakura, xIdeals.tif (42434 bytes) Okakura (18621913) worked withErnest F. Fenollosa to found the Tokyo Fine Art School, now known as Tokyo
    http://www.asianstudiesbooks.com/4925080261.htm
    Asian Studies Book Services
    About us

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    ... Participating publishers
    The Ideals of the East
    With Special Reference to the Art of Japan
    by Kakuzo Okakura Written at the turn of the last century and first published in 1883, when there was a strong tendency in Japan towards equating western culture with enlightenment, the author counters with an appreciation of the Japanese sense of beauty, values and way of thinking through this history of Japanese art. His point of view remains fresh and valid today. Okakura (1862-1913) worked with Ernest F. Fenollosa to found the Tokyo Fine Art School, now known as Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music. He later became Curator of the Department of Oriental Art at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Published by ICG-Muse, Inc.
    Published 2000, 268 pp.
    ISBN 4 925080 26 1, paperback, £10.99

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