#east asia

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Netsuke of Two Male FiguresDate: 19th century, Japan.Medium: IvoryAnd “Pop Netsuke (Anger)” availablNetsuke of Two Male FiguresDate: 19th century, Japan.Medium: IvoryAnd “Pop Netsuke (Anger)” availablNetsuke of Two Male FiguresDate: 19th century, Japan.Medium: IvoryAnd “Pop Netsuke (Anger)” availabl

Netsuke of Two Male Figures
Date: 19th century, Japan.
Medium: Ivory

And “Pop Netsuke (Anger)” available on Redbubble as shirts, prints, journals, or anything else, if you’d like one of your own or to support Asian History!

The above is a katabori netsuke, or a “sculpture” netsuke. Netsuke are Japanese in origin, and provided people with a unique way to combine function and fashion:

The traditional form of Japanese dress, the kimono, had no pockets. Women would tuck small personal items into their sleeves, but men suspended their tobacco pouches, pipes, purses, writing implements, and other items of daily use on a silk cord passed behind their obi(sash). These hanging objects are called sagemono. The netsuke was attached to the other end of the cord preventing the cord from slipping through the obi. A sliding bead (ojime) was strung on the cord between the netsuke and the sagemono to allow the opening and closing of the sagemono.

The entire ensemble was then worn, at the waist, and functioned as a sort of removable external pocket. All three objects (netsuke,ojime and the different types of sagemono) were often beautifully decorated with elaborate carving, lacquer work, or inlays of rare and exotic materials. Subjects portrayed in netsuke include naturally found objects, plants and animals, legends and legendary heroes, myths and mystical beasts, gods and religious symbols, daily activities, and myriad other themes.

-International Netsuke Society


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booksnbuildings:Model of the former synagogue of Kaifeng, China. Built in 1163, it was destroyed i

booksnbuildings:

Model of the former synagogue of Kaifeng, China. Built in 1163, it was destroyed in the 1860s.

Read about the Kaifeng Jews here.


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sweetbluehyacinth

I work for the Sainsbury Institute, great to hear that people are spreading the word about ORJACH! :)

That’s fantastic! It looks like a great resource, I definitely meandered on the website for a bit myself. 

Hi AAGU mods,

Thank you for continuing to maintain this space for us angry asian girls!

I was wondering if you might be able to boost this post about my GoFundMe page. http://stabra.tumblr.com/post/159759162688/click-here-to-support-help-esther-attend I am raising funds to attend VONA/Voices Writers’ Workshop, where I will be working on a memoir about my father’s struggle with depression and suicide. I hope it will contribute to the conversation on mental health in the Asian immigrant community. I have written in more detail about it on the GoFundMe page.

Thank you so much! I appreciate all your work and support for the Asian American community!

Warmly,

Esther

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Sure!

Link: http://stabra.tumblr.com/post/159759162688/click-here-to-support-help-esther-attend

Rough Sea at Naruto in Awa Province (no. 55 from the series Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces), Hiroshige, 1855

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