000 02048nam a22002057a 4500
003 OSt
005 20250708093211.0
008 250708b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781101981436
040 _cLCIC Library
082 _aREF 820.91403 B95
100 _aIan Buruma
_eAuthor
245 _aTOKYO ROMANCE :
_ba memoir /
_cIan Buruma
260 _a[Place of publication not identified]:
_bPenguin Books,
_cc2019
300 _a243 pages : illustrations ; 21cm
520 _aAfter stumbling accidentally into Japan in the early 1970s, Ian Buruma stayed for most of that decade and has since established his reputation as a thoughtful and knowledgeable guide to the history, society, and popular culture of the country. This book is an entertaining account of the author's introduction to Japan in an understudied and underappreciated time. As a young and idealistic middle-class Dutch boy, Buruma found himself going against the counsel of an older Amsterdam associate who had lived in Tokyo and who told him in no uncertain terms to "steer clear of Donald Ritchie's crowd." Arriving in Japan with little knowledge beyond the surreal and fascinating attractions of its avant-garde theater scene, Buruma soon found himself touring, traveling, drinking, and cavorting not only with the "Ritchie crowd," but also with many other famous movers and shakers in the performance-art world of the late 1960s and early 1970s. A fascinating account of a period of Japanese history little covered in English-language literature, this book is a must read for anyone interested in postwar Japanese theater, film, or dance. Accessible, compelling, and informative, it captures the sheer power and energy of the counterculture of the period, dismantling the homogeneous, comfortable, middle-class ideology of the salaryman so familiar to the West. It stands as a remarkable witness to one of the most exciting and innovative periods of recent Japanese artistic history
650 _aArtists Japan History
650 _a1900-1999
942 _2ddc
_cD
_n0
999 _c5525
_d5525