A Different Kind of Luxury
by Andy Couturier
Inspiring encounters with philosophers, farmers, and artists living rich, simple lives in the deep green mountains of Japan
 
 
First Article | Overview of the Book| Last Article
   
 
Table of Contents:
   
 

Chapter 1. "An Artist of Farming Finds Philosophy in the Rice Paddies"
Koichi Yamashita

Chapter 2. "Making the Time to Simply Stop and Think"
Atsuko Watanabe

Chapter 3. "Exploring Sutras of Sound"
Kogan Murata

Chapter 4. "Sustaining the Aesthetic of Ancient Japan"
San Oizumi

Chapter 5. "From the Bars of Osaka to the Tibetan High Plateau"
Ruriko Hino

Chapter 6. "The Accidental Mystic"
Jinko Kaneko

Chapter 7. "Living Within the Abundance of Less"
Osamu Nakamura

Chapter 8. "Harvesting the World's Profusion"
Gufudo Watanabe

Chapter 9. "Moving in Life from Shame into Song"
Tama Ozaki

Chapter 10. "Writing a Future from the Pages of the Past"
Masanori Oe

Chapter 11. "An Inheritance of Wisdom from Ancestors And Mountains"
Nako Oizumi

Chapter 12. "Looking for Essences in Light, Sound and Stars"
Akira Ito

Chapter 13. "Laughing Along With the Absurdity Of Existence"
Taizo Ichikawa

Chapter 14. "A Cultivation of Sentiments in the Slowness of Time"
Asha Amemiya

Chapter 15. "Drawing Attention to the Generous Pace of Nature"
Miyuki Kobayashi

Chapter 16. "A Dance of Color, Space and Line"
Wakako Oe

In our society of overwork, unfulfillable desires and maddening rush, we feel, somehow, that we have lost something important. For decades Westerners have been looking to Buddhism and other Asian disciplines, as well as to traditional peoples all over the world, to try to find a more satisfying way to live. Yet it's difficult for us to live in these people's ways, having grown up in an urbanized, industrialized culture. We are surrounded by excess, and we have so little time.

In villages throughout the steep green mountains of Japan--arguably a more industrialized, overworked society than our own--are some fascinating people who have chosen a slower, simpler way to live. Inhabiting beautiful old farmhouses among the terraced rice fields, their lives are rich in the luxury of time: time for contemplation, time to lose oneself in meandering conversations, and time to know the pleasures of the shimmering natural world. They have actualized the ideal of a simple, fulfilling life.

A Different Kind Of Luxury is a book of portraits of these artists, craftspeople, philosophers and farmers living lives of reduced consumption and increased satisfaction. The vibrant writing conveys a sense of their characters, as well as the strongly felt (but humbly stated) philosophies that guide them. Through a mixture of evocative description, the telling of their stories, photographic portraits and beautiful reproductions of their art, this book lets readers into the lush texture of their lives.

 

 
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