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Flowers That Kill

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Flowers are beautiful. People often communicate their love, sorrow, and other feelings to each other by offering flowers, like roses. Flowers can also be symbols of collective identity, as cherry b...
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  • 12 August 2015
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Flowers are beautiful. People often communicate their love, sorrow, and other feelings to each other by offering flowers, like roses. Flowers can also be symbols of collective identity, as cherry blossoms are for the Japanese. But, are they also deceptive? Do people become aware when their meaning changes, perhaps as flowers are deployed by the state and dictators? Did people recognize that the roses they offered to Stalin and Hitler became a propaganda tool? Or were they like the Japanese, who, including the soldiers, did not realize when the state told them to fall like cherry blossoms, it meant their deaths?

Flowers That Kill proposes an entirely new theoretical understanding of the role of quotidian symbols and their political significance to understand how they lead people, if indirectly, to wars, violence, and even self-exclusion and self-destruction precisely because symbolic communication is full of ambiguity and opacity. Using a broad comparative approach, Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney illustrates how the aesthetic and multiple meanings of symbols, and at times symbols without images become possible sources for creating opacity which prevents people from recognizing the shifting meaning of the symbols.

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Price: $32.00
Pages: 296
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 12 August 2015
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780804795890
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Contrasting the symbolism of cherry blossoms manipulated by the Japanese military state and that of the rose in Europe, Ohnuki-Tierney explores how authoritarian regimes use icons of popular culture to foster their domination. This superb book opens a new chapter in political anthropology, showing how the use of symbols in political discourse both produces meaning and disguises the foundations upon which this meaning is constructed."—Philippe Descola, Collège de France
Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney is the William F. Vilas Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin. She is the author of numerous books, including Illness and Culture in Contemporary Japan (7th printing in 1997) and Rice as Self: Japanese Identities Through Time (3rd printing in 1995), the editor of Culture Through Time (Stanford, 1991), and contributor to Golden Arches East (Stanford, 2006).
Introduction: Opacity, Misrecognition, and Other Complexities of Symbolic Communication
1. Japanese Cherry Blossoms: From the Beauty of Life to the Sublimity of Sacrificial Death
2. European Roses: From "Bread and Roses" to the Aestheticization of Murderers
3. The Subversive Monkey in Japanese Culture: From Scapegoat to Clown
4. Rice and the Japanese Collective Self: Purity of Exclusion
5. The Collective Self and Cultural/Political Nationalisms: Cross-Cultural Perspectives
6. The Invisible and Inaudible Japanese Emperor
7. (Non-)Externalization of Religious and Political Authority/Power: A Cross-Cultural Perspective