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About This Book
ISBN13: 9780974199535 |
Synopses & Reviews
Publisher Comments:
andldquo;Full of rich details of contemporary Japan... in the end readers should understand why Madame Butterfly no longer exists. Or perhaps never existed at all.andrdquo; andmdash; Todd Shimodaauthor of The Fourth Treasureand 365 Views of Mt. Fuji
andquot;An eye-opening, detailed look at the private, intimate lives of Japanese women... This is an intelligent and authoritative work, covering everything from adultery to sex volunteers and the role of fortune tellers in Japanese romance. It is at once illuminating and entertaining, credible and so engrossing you will find it difficult to put down.andquot; andmdash; Robert Whiting, author of Tokyo Underworld, The Meaning of Ichiro and You Gotta Have Wa
andquot;These are the stories of Japanese women struggling to find themselves in the 21st century; by reading them westerners will likely see themselves reflected through a prism of shared hopes and disappointments.andquot; andmdash; Colleen Mondor, Bookslut
andldquo;[Kawakamiandrsquo;s essays are] brilliantly written, and a perfect example of how similar bad marriages are, regardless of their setting.andrdquo;andmdash;Bookslut.com
Sumie Kawakamiandrsquo;s Goodbye Madame Butterflyis an intimate look at the sex lives of Japanese people from a female perspective. This groundbreaking work of nonfiction will shatter the myth of the pliant, coy Japanese woman and replace her with a complex, erotic, sexually charged and fiercely independent woman who struggles to find her place in a male-dominated society.
More info at: http://goodbyemadamebutterfly.com
Sumie Kawakamiis a Japanese journalist and single mother who has written extensively on marriage and sex, including a 2004 book titled Tsuma no Koi(Wives in Love) with Astra, Inc., and three essays in Kuhaku andamp; Other Accounts from Japan(Chin Music Press, 2005).
Synopsis:
andmdash; Daniel Handler, aka Lemony Snicket, author of the best-selling A Series of Unfortunate Events
andquot;An eye-opening, detailed look at the private, intimate lives of Japanese women ... This is an intelligent and authoritative work, covering everything from adultery to sex volunteers and the role of fortune tellers in Japanese romance. It is at once illuminating and entertaining, credible and so engrossing you will find it difficult to put down.andquot;
andmdash; Robert Whiting, author of Tokyo Underworld, The Meaning of Ichiro and You Gotta Have Wa
andldquo;[Kawakamiandrsquo;s essays are] brilliantly written, and a perfect example of how similar bad marriages are, regardless of their setting.andrdquo;andmdash;Bookslut.com
Often disturbing, always intriguing and insightful, these intimate portraitsin Goodbye Madame Butterflyreveal the struggles and complexities of modern Japanese women.
Sumie Kawakamitakes us into a world where fortune tellers serve as counselors, where a female executive who turns tricks by night is seen as a heroine and where the hot blood of newlyweds quickly grows cold.
Goodbye Madame Butterflyoffers a modern twist on the tradition in Japanese literature to revel in tales of sexual exploits. Kawakamiand#39;s nonfiction update on this theme offers strands of hope for women struggling to liberate themselves from joyless, sexless relationships.
More info at: http://goodbyemadamebutterfly.com
Sumie Kawakamiis a Japanese journalist and single mother who has written extensively on marriage and sex, including a 2004 book titled Tsuma no Koi(Wives in Love) with Astra, Inc., and three essays in Kuhaku andamp; Other Accounts from Japan(Chin Music Press, 2005).
Synopsis:
andldquo;Full of rich details of contemporary Japan... in the end readers should understand why Madame Butterfly no longer exists. Or perhaps never existed at all.andrdquo; andmdash; Todd Shimodaauthor of The Fourth Treasureand 365 Views of Mt. Fuji
andquot;An eye-opening, detailed look at the private, intimate lives of Japanese women... This is an intelligent and authoritative work, covering everything from adultery to sex volunteers and the role of fortune tellers in Japanese romance. It is at once illuminating and entertaining, credible and so engrossing you will find it difficult to put down.andquot; andmdash; Robert Whiting, author of Tokyo Underworld, The Meaning of Ichiro and You Gotta Have Wa
andquot;These are the stories of Japanese women struggling to find themselves in the 21st century; by reading them westerners will likely see themselves reflected through a prism of shared hopes and disappointments.andquot; andmdash; Colleen Mondor, Bookslut
andldquo;[Kawakamiandrsquo;s essays are] brilliantly written, and a perfect example of how similar bad marriages are, regardless of their setting.andrdquo;andmdash;Bookslut.com
Sumie Kawakamiandrsquo;s Goodbye Madame Butterflyis an intimate look at the sex lives of Japanese people from a female perspective. This groundbreaking work of nonfiction will shatter the myth of the pliant, coy Japanese woman and replace her with a complex, erotic, sexually charged and fiercely independent woman who struggles to find her place in a male-dominated society.
More info at: http://goodbyemadamebutterfly.com
Sumie Kawakamiis a Japanese journalist and single mother who has written extensively on marriage and sex, including a 2004 book titled Tsuma no Koi(Wives in Love) with Astra, Inc., and three essays in Kuhaku andamp; Other Accounts from Japan(Chin Music Press, 2005).
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Product Details
- ISBN:
- 9780974199535
- Subtitle:
- Sex, Marriage and the Modern Japanese Woman
- Author:
- Translator:
- Enomoto, Yuko
- Author:
- Publisher:
- Chin Music
- Subject:
- Asia - General
- Subject:
- Women's Studies - General
- Subject:
- Sociology - Marriage & Family
- Subject:
- Human Sexuality
- Subject:
- Asia
- Publication Date:
- September 2007
- Binding:
- Hardcover
- Grade Level:
- General/trade
- Language:
- English
- Pages:
- 219
- Dimensions:
- 7.52x5.25x.89 in. .73 lbs.










