Chie Nakane

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Chie Nakane
Born (1926-11-30) November 30, 1926 (age 97)
Tokyo, Japan
Occupation author and anthropologist, Professor Emerita at Tokyo University
Nationality Japan
Genre Social anthropology
Subject Societies of India, Tibet, Okinawa and Japan, Human relations in vertical society of Japan
Notable awards Order of Culture, 2001
Medals of Honor (Japan) Purple ribbon, 1990

Chie Nakane (中根 千枝 Nakane Chie?, born November 30, 1926) is Professor Emerita of Social Anthropology at the University of Tokyo.

Nakane’s work focuses on cross-cultural comparisons of social structures in Asia, notably Japan, India, and China. She is internationally known for her bestselling book, Japanese Society, which has been translated into 13 languages. In this book, Nakane characterizes Japan as “a vertical society” where human relations are based on “place” (shared space) instead of “attribute” (qualification).

Nakane graduated from Tsuda College in 1947 and then completed her graduate work specializing in China and Tibet at the University of Tokyo in 1952. In 1953-1957, she did fieldwork in India and studied in the School of Economics at the University of London. In 1959-1960, she was Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago. In 1960-1961, she was Lecturer at the University of London.

In 1970, Nakane became the first female professor at the University of Tokyo, where she served as Director of the Institute of Oriental Culture in 1980-1982. She was Professor at Osaka University and the National Museum of Ethnology and Visiting Professor at Cornell University in 1975-1980. In 1995, she became the first and only female member of the Japan Academy. She is also an honorary member of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland.

Books

  • Nakane, C. (1967). Kinship and economic organization in rural Japan. London: Athlone Press.
  • Nakane, C. (1970). Japanese society. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
  • Nakane, C. (1972). Human relations in Japan: Summary translation of “Tateshakai no Ningen Kankei.” Tokyo: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Japan.
  • Nakane, C., & Chiao, C. (Eds.). (1992). Home bound: Studies in East Asian society—Papers presented at the symposium in honor of the 80th birthday of Professor Fei Xiaotong. Tokyo: Center for East Asian Cultural Studies and Toyo Bunko.
  • Nakane, C., & Oishi, S. (Eds.). (1990). Tokugawa Japan: The social and economic antecedents of modern Japan. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press.

Articles

  • Nakane, C. (1964). Logic and the smile: When Japanese meet Indians. Japan Quarterly, 11(4), 434-438.
  • Nakane, C. (1965). Towards a theory of Japanese social structure: A unilateral society. The Economic Weekly, 17(5-7), 197-216.
  • Nakane, C. (1972). Social background of Japanese in Southeast Asia. The Developing Economics, 10(2), 115-125.
  • Nakane, C. (1974). Cultural anthropology in Japan. Annual Review of Anthropology, 3, 57-72.
  • Nakane, C. (1975). A cross-cultural look at organizational behavior with particular attention to the difference between Japan and the United States. Linguistic Communications, 15, 95-106.
  • Nakane, C. (1975). Fieldwork in India: A Japanese experience. In A. Beteille & T. N. Madan (Eds.), Encounter and experience: Personal accounts of fieldwork (pp. 13–26). Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press.
  • Nakane, C. (1982). The effect of cultural tradition on anthropologists. In H. M. Fahim (Ed.), Indigenous anthropology in non-Western countries: Proceedings of a Burg Wartenstein symposium (pp. 52–60). Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press.

Honors

Notes

  1. "Cultural Highlights; From the Japanese Press (August 1–October 31, 2001)," Japan Foundation Newsletter, Vol. XXIX, No. 2, p. 7. ISSN 0385-2318

References