Fieldwork Photos
Merry White
In 1975-6 I conducted my dissertation fieldwork in Japan,
and as an absorbing sideline activity, took a year of tea ceremony lessons in
the Omotesenke style in Tokyo. This was my public performance meant to display
what I'd learned, both in tea and in the wearing of kimono.

Seasonalism is part of an aesthetic of nature,and cherry blossom time inKyoto epitomizes the evanescence of seasonality

During 2002-3, I was visiting professor at the Kyoto Center for Japanese
Studies, a consortium program for American undergraduates to which Boston
University belongs. This was an opportunity to learn Kyoto and ,one page ahead
of the students, to teach it.
.
Fall is the other Kyoto season and my
favorite as the color lasts longer and the
crowds have more scope for participation
The "Daimonji" is a character,"dai"
for "big"carved out of the greenery on a
Kyoto hillside,and set afire in the late
afternoon
The Mo-an café, a converted tea house at the top of a hill
along a hiking trail in Kyoto, became the site of my personal pilgrimage to wonderful coffee and views.

Schoolgirls in junior high school are on a class trip to Kyoto and vainly attempt an organized group shot with fingers in the conventional "Victory" mide.
A large demonstration in the center of Kyoto against the war in Iraq, one
of many such in 2002-3.
Participant observation at Heian Shrine 
Kyoto culinary tourism: sampling the
tsukemono on Kyoto's Nishiki
street,
known as "pickle street" to tourists

Taken in hand by the Colonel in Kyoto

Fashion under construction: cutting edges in Kyoto
Development from the "grounds" up: coffee for schools
in rural Cambodia
In 2002-3, while resident in Kyoto and conducting resarch on
the social history of cafes in Japan, I learned of a project to build
schools in devasted areas of Cambodia. When I also learned the coffee
was the main crop of the area, and that it cannot be exported due to overplantig
in Vietnam, I helped put the experts whom I had met together with the
farmers in Cambodia,and helped to start the export of Cambodian coffee
to Japan. We now have eleven Japanese specialty roasting companies buying
our coffee, and one in America. The blends are doing very well and the
companies all donate a percentage of sales to community building. There
are now about 220 elementary schools in the project and one of them, built
by Richard Dyck, is named for the man who directed both of our dissertations,
Ezra F. Vogel.



Drawings by fifth
and sixth graders