Lexington Books
Pages: 208
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-4985-4484-9 • Hardback • February 2017 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4985-4485-6 • eBook • February 2017 • $116.50 • (£90.00)
Nobuko Adachi is associate professor of anthropology at Illinois State University.
Chapter 1: Globalization and Localization: Theorizing Identity in Kubo
Chapter 2: Dancing Farmers: Everyday Life in Kubo
Chapter 3: Why Be Children of Nature?: The Development of the Nōhon-shugi Ideology and History of the Kubo Commune
Chapter 4: “Is Our Women’s Language ‘Abrupt’ or ‘Rough?’”: Social Roles and Gendered Spheres
Chapter 5: “After all, she is not even an o-jō-san (lady from the city), but a gaijin (foreigner)!”: Identities and Diaspora
Chapter 6: “We are fine with someone marrying a non-Japanese as long as they live outside the farm”: Cultural Identity and Ethnic Capital
Chapter 7: Beyond Kubo
Adachi has written an engaging and insightful ethnography.Considering that the book is based on deep, longterm research beginning over twenty-five years ago, one wonders whether Adachi, a person from Japan, eventually comes to be considered a quasi local.
— Anthropos
Ethnic Capital in a Japanese Brazilian Commune is an important addition to the growing field of Latin American ethnic studies. By focusing on one commune in the huge agricultural state of São Paulo, Brazil, Nobuko Adachi provides readers with fascinating insights into how capital helps to create community identities linked to economic viability. As she shows, daily life is filled with both local and global strategies that have an impact on everything from gender norms to racial and religious ideas of self and other.— Jeffrey Lesser, Emory University
Nobuko Adachi's ethnography of Kubo, a rural Japanese commune in contemporary Brazil, interweaves empirical description, theoretical analysis, and an evocation of the human dimension of living in today's globalized world. Using the key concept of ethnic capital, she uncovers the dynamics within which actors are not only subjects of external forces but actively construct their own identities and use ethnic practices as resources to further their interests. Clearly written with a flowing style, this volume represents a significant contribution to scholarship about the processes of globalization, developments in Brazil and Japan, and contemporary understandings of ethnicity.— Eyal Ben-Ari, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
As a historian of Japanese North Americans with some grasp of Japanese Brazilians—the largest element of the Japanese diaspora—I was fascinated and instructed by Nobuko Adachi's nuanced account of a Japanese minority group in a rural commune in isolated northern São Paulo. That she is, herself, a Japanese North American, provides an added bite to her anthropological insights about ethnicity, class, and gender.— Roger Daniels, University of Cincinnati
Anthropologist Nobuko Adachi presents a lively and accessible account of Japanese immigrants to Brazil’s Aliança village near Mato Grosso do Sul. Daily practices revolving around the colonists’ sense of community, ethnicity, Japanese agrarian communalism, women’s use of language, ‘insider vs outsider’ social relations, and the pursuit of art and expression, all inform this thoroughly engaging ethnography.— Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, University of California, Los Angeles