The Way of Choju: Consuming Longevity in a Rural Japanese Town

This thesis reviews the literature on the anthropology and biology of aging, Japanese health cosmology, and self-medication and analyzes the findings from a study investigating the perceptions on diet, health, and longevity of rural Japanese elderly living in southwestern Japan. A biocultural theore...

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Main Author: Busch, Jessica
Other Authors: Etkin, Nina
Published: University of Hawaii at Manoa 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10125/7062
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spelling ndltd-UHAWAII-oai-scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu-10125-70622013-01-08T11:10:40ZThe Way of Choju: Consuming Longevity in a Rural Japanese TownBusch, JessicaThis thesis reviews the literature on the anthropology and biology of aging, Japanese health cosmology, and self-medication and analyzes the findings from a study investigating the perceptions on diet, health, and longevity of rural Japanese elderly living in southwestern Japan. A biocultural theoretical perspective is used to understand the relationship between culture, identity, tradition, and longevity. To rural elderly Japanese, health is a matter of maintaining balance through diet and lifestyle, while disease is diagnosed and treated by physicians and biomedical pharmaceuticals. Traditional Japanese foods have been shown to be longevity-enhancing, although Okinawans, who have the greatest life expectancy of Japanese, do not eat a traditional Japanese diet. This disparity is reconciled by the adopted of a number of foods from Okinawa, such as nigagori. The bioscientific literature on some foods listed by informants as good for longevity is analyzed and linked to the literature on cultural identity and nationalism. Consuming traditional Japanese foods for longevity allows Japanese to participate in their cultural identity while at the same time, eating the biologically best foods for health and longevity.viii, 163 leavesUniversity of Hawaii at ManoaEtkin, Nina2009-03-06T19:39:25Z2009-03-06T19:39:25Z2002-122002-12ThesisTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10125/7062All UHM dissertations and theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission from the copyright owner.https://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/handle/10125/591
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description This thesis reviews the literature on the anthropology and biology of aging, Japanese health cosmology, and self-medication and analyzes the findings from a study investigating the perceptions on diet, health, and longevity of rural Japanese elderly living in southwestern Japan. A biocultural theoretical perspective is used to understand the relationship between culture, identity, tradition, and longevity. To rural elderly Japanese, health is a matter of maintaining balance through diet and lifestyle, while disease is diagnosed and treated by physicians and biomedical pharmaceuticals. Traditional Japanese foods have been shown to be longevity-enhancing, although Okinawans, who have the greatest life expectancy of Japanese, do not eat a traditional Japanese diet. This disparity is reconciled by the adopted of a number of foods from Okinawa, such as nigagori. The bioscientific literature on some foods listed by informants as good for longevity is analyzed and linked to the literature on cultural identity and nationalism. Consuming traditional Japanese foods for longevity allows Japanese to participate in their cultural identity while at the same time, eating the biologically best foods for health and longevity. === viii, 163 leaves
author2 Etkin, Nina
author_facet Etkin, Nina
Busch, Jessica
author Busch, Jessica
spellingShingle Busch, Jessica
The Way of Choju: Consuming Longevity in a Rural Japanese Town
author_sort Busch, Jessica
title The Way of Choju: Consuming Longevity in a Rural Japanese Town
title_short The Way of Choju: Consuming Longevity in a Rural Japanese Town
title_full The Way of Choju: Consuming Longevity in a Rural Japanese Town
title_fullStr The Way of Choju: Consuming Longevity in a Rural Japanese Town
title_full_unstemmed The Way of Choju: Consuming Longevity in a Rural Japanese Town
title_sort way of choju: consuming longevity in a rural japanese town
publisher University of Hawaii at Manoa
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10125/7062
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