Tea of the Sages: The Art of Sencha

Paperback: $30.00
ISBN-13: 9780824820879
Published: March 1999
You must register to use the waitlist feature. Please login or create an account

Additional Information

272 pages
SHARE:
FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedin
  • About the Book
  • The Japanese tea ceremony is generally identified with chanoyu and its bowls of whipped, powdered green tea served in surroundings influenced by the tenets of Zen Buddhism. Tea of the Sages is the first English language study of the alternate tea tradition of sencha. At sencha tea gatherings, steeped green leaf tea is prepared in an atmosphere indebted to the humanistic values of the Chinese sages and the materialistic culture of elite Chinese society during the Ming and Qing dynasties. Although sencha once surpassed chanoyu in popularity, it is now overshadowed by chanoyu, despite the existence of more than a hundred sencha schools throughout Japan. This exceptionally well-illustrated volume explores sencha's philosophy and arts from the seventeenth century to the present. Introduced by Chinese merchants and scholar-monks, sencha first gained favor in Japan among devotees of the Chinese literati.

    By the early nineteenth century, it had become popular with a wide spectrum of urban and rural residents. Some took up sencha as a subversive activity in opposition to the mandated protocol of chanoyu. Others enjoyed sencha because of its connections with elite Chinese culture, knowledge of which indicated intellectual and cultural refinement. Still others relished it simply as a fine tasting beverage. Sencha inspired painters and poets and fostered major advances within craft industries from ceramics to metalwork and basketry. Sencha aficionados, many of whom became serious connoisseurs of Chinese art and antiquities, hosted some of the earliest public art exhibitions.

    Tea of the Sages opens with a chronological overview of tea in China and its transmission to Japan before situating sencha within the rich milieu of Chinese material culture available in early modern Japan. Subsequent chapters outline the multifaceted history of the formalization of the sencha tea ceremony, drawing upon sources such as treatises and less formal writings as well as analysis of tea gathering records, utensils and their prescribed arrangements, paintings, prints, and sencha architecture.

  • About the Author(s)
    • Patricia J. Graham, Author

      Patricia J. Graham is assistant to the director of the Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, and a consultant on Asian art.
  • Reviews and Endorsements
    • A wonderful book: stylish, provocative and different from most of the other volumes of tea research currently available in Japanese and English.
      —Japanese Studies
    • Graham has produced a book that not only 'fills a gap,' but is itself a lucid and elegant introduction to sencha, and indeed to the larger 'world of tea' in Japanese history that includes it and chanoyu.
      —Journal of Asian Studies
    • Graham [provides] a valuable thematic thread which weaves together widely disparate aesthetic, intellectual, social, and economic phenomena that mediated the assimilation of Ming and Ch'ing culture in Japan.
      Monumenta Nipponica
    • [This book's] greatest value lies in the fact that it introduces the 'rival tea ceremony' to a Western audience.... I am convinced that this pioneering study will inspire many other researchers.
      IIAS Newsletter
  • Supporting Resources