Thursday, February 7, 2019
Ian Burumas Behind the Mask :: Ian Buruma Behind the Mask
Ian Burumas empennage the Mask Ian Buruma was born in the Netherlands in 1951. He went to school in both Holland and Japan, and he has spent a great deal of time in Japan. Ian Buruma is an author, journalist and a prof at Bard College in newly York. He sometimes writes for the New York Review of Books, the New York Times Magazine, the New Republic, the New Yorker, and the Guardian.The give-and-take, Behind the Mask, was a very interesting one. This book is filled with lots of Japans history that around people know nothing just about. Much of the content in Behind the Mask is focused on sexuality and violence. The book has thirteen chapters distributively dealing with a different topic. It starts out with a kind of mythology about the origins of Japan. It is then followed by chapters on m early(a)s in Japan and marriage. Some of the other topics focus on women, geisha, and yakuza.Behind the Mask is a great book explaining a great deal of the sexuality related to the culture an d theology of Japan. To the Japanese, sex is a part of nature it is not considered a sin. The tally thing that can happen to an individual in Japan is to be socially shamed or dishonored. The Japanese do believe in a sort of pollution though. They fear being unclean, death, and blood, among other things. catharsis is a big deal in Japan.Ian Buruma, the author, not only explains in great detail much of the history and practices of the Japanese, but he overly writes much about significant people and places dealing with the topic. There were umteen significant people who contributed a great deal to the practices in Japan. He as well describes many of the important places where certain events occurred. He explains what the kabuki theaters looked like and also the famous strip clubs.The Washington Post Book World writes, A fascinating exploration of Japanese culture the fantasy life of the Japanese. It fishes its insights from the fertile and muddy river of popular culture that th e Foreign Ministry has always tried to privateness from foreign view. Through skillfully chosen subjects sex, gender, the mother we find a comprehensible (if sometimes surprising) fantasy persona behind the inscrutable interfascinating, imaginative, highly polished, entertaining.
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