Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-06T09:50:07.843Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Houses of the people, kitchens of the great: a Japanese enigma

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 August 2008

Martin Morris
Affiliation:
Department of Architecture, Faculty of Engineering, University of Chiba, 1-33 Yayoi Cho, Inage-ku, Chiba-shi 263, Japan

Abstract

The gulf dividing the houses of ruling elites from those in use among the bulk of a population (here referred to as vernacular) is a phenomenon common to many cultures. It reflects the close correlation between the kind of house in which an individual lives and his social status. A grasp of the relationship, between elite and vernacular houses in societies where both exist enhances our understanding of the development of domestic architecture, and our appreciation of the wider historical significance of that development. This paper explores an aspect of the relationship between elite and vernacular houses in seventeenth-century Japan.

Type
History
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Hirai, K. (1981). Nakai-ke Monjo no Kenkyu, Vol. 6, Chuo Koron Bijutsu Shuppan, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Ito, T. (1972). Minka (Heibonsha Survey of Japanese Art), transl. Gage, R., Weatherhill, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Juyo Bunkazai Hensan linkai (ed.) (1982). Shinshitei Juyo Bunkazai 12, Kenzobutsu II, Minka, Mainichi Shinbunsha, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Kawakami, M. (1971). Shoin I (Nihon Kenchikushi Kiso Shiryo Shusei 16), Chuo Koron Bijutsu Shuppan, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Kodera, T. (1983). Minka to Machinami (Meiho Nihon no Bijutsu No. 25), Shogakukan, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Matsuoka, T. (1988). Osaka-jo no Rekishi to Kozo, Meicho Shuppan, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Miyazawa, S. (1985). Nihon no Minka, Shogakukan, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Morris, M. N. (1996). ‘Kinsei Shoki Joso Jutaku no Daidokoro to Shomin Jukyo’ in Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians of Japan, No. 26, Kenchikushi Gakka, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Moto Rikkyu Nijo-jo, Jimusho (ed.) (1962). Juyo Bunkazai Njjo-jo Shud Koji Hokokusho Dai 4 Shu, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Nagano-ken, (ed.) (1990). Nagano-ken Shi, Bijutsu Kenchiku Shiryohen, Kenchiku, Nagano-ken Shi Hankokai.Google Scholar
Naito, A. (1972). Edo no Toshi to Kenchiku, Mainichi Shinbunsha, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Naito, A. (1988). Fukugen nihon Taikan 1, Shiro to Yakata, Sekai Bunkasha. Tokyo.Google Scholar
Namioka-cho Kyoiku linkai (ed.) (1989). Showa 61/62 Nendo Narmioka-jo Ato Hakkutsu Chosa Hokokusho, Narnioka-jo Ato X, Namioka-cho Kyoiku linkaiGoogle Scholar
Nishi, K. & Hozumi, K. (1985). What is Japanese Architecture? transl. Mack Horton, H.Kodansha. Japan.Google Scholar
Ota, H. (1984). Nihon Kenchikushi Tokuron 2, Nihon Jutakushi no Kenkyu, Iwanami Shoten, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Sato, T. (1979). Kinsei Bushi Jutaku, Sobunsha, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Sekiguchi, K. (1982). Yamanashi-ken no Minka, Yamanashi-ken Kyoiku linkai.Google Scholar
Tochigi-ken Kyoiku, linkai (ed.) (1982). Tochigi-ken no Minka, Tochigiken, Japan.Google Scholar