The cultural production of Japanese suburban housing between 1910 and 1939 was informed by changing perceptions of family and self in relation to domestic space and the everyday. This article focuses on the Hankyu Corporation, an Osaka-based railway company that presented itself as a cultural authority for middle-class families in a wide range of enterprises, including the construction of suburban estates. By revisiting its publicity, including a monthly magazine and housing catalogues, we demonstrate the complex process through which Hankyu narratively visualized and materialized an image of suburban life in its housing designs. We address the subjective nature of taste in influencing and shaping consumer choices around the spatial product...
The article discusses the significance of cultural capital for the understanding of the field of hou...
The article focuses on Japan’s pavilion at the Columbian Exposition held in Chicago in 1893, explori...
The space and place of the Japanese home holds an iconic status in both foreign and indigenous under...
This study explores the subtle relationship between middle-class lives and domestic architecture in ...
The aim of this paper is to shed light on the innovative luxury marketing strategies of the early Ja...
The term machi, signifying both neighborhood and small town, is a key element for understanding Japa...
From the mid-nineteenth century, Japanese elites experimented with foreign planning concepts and tra...
With the possible exception of woodblock prints, no phase of Japanese civilization has been so much ...
The current urban Japanese houses have lost its richness closely related to its nature, landscapes, ...
The Machiya, a traditional wooden house in the city of Kyoto, were demolished by thousands up to the...
This dissertation examines the spatial and built forms of Japanese power. As it sought to consolida...
The Hanshin (阪神) and Hankyu (阪急) Railway lines run parallel from Umeda, ...
Japanese contemporary urban houses have list their traditional relationships to nature, to seasons, ...
UNKThis article aims to trace the process of social change of Japanese urban culture by the observat...
The purpose of this article is to investigate the representation of suburbia in promotional material...
The article discusses the significance of cultural capital for the understanding of the field of hou...
The article focuses on Japan’s pavilion at the Columbian Exposition held in Chicago in 1893, explori...
The space and place of the Japanese home holds an iconic status in both foreign and indigenous under...
This study explores the subtle relationship between middle-class lives and domestic architecture in ...
The aim of this paper is to shed light on the innovative luxury marketing strategies of the early Ja...
The term machi, signifying both neighborhood and small town, is a key element for understanding Japa...
From the mid-nineteenth century, Japanese elites experimented with foreign planning concepts and tra...
With the possible exception of woodblock prints, no phase of Japanese civilization has been so much ...
The current urban Japanese houses have lost its richness closely related to its nature, landscapes, ...
The Machiya, a traditional wooden house in the city of Kyoto, were demolished by thousands up to the...
This dissertation examines the spatial and built forms of Japanese power. As it sought to consolida...
The Hanshin (阪神) and Hankyu (阪急) Railway lines run parallel from Umeda, ...
Japanese contemporary urban houses have list their traditional relationships to nature, to seasons, ...
UNKThis article aims to trace the process of social change of Japanese urban culture by the observat...
The purpose of this article is to investigate the representation of suburbia in promotional material...
The article discusses the significance of cultural capital for the understanding of the field of hou...
The article focuses on Japan’s pavilion at the Columbian Exposition held in Chicago in 1893, explori...
The space and place of the Japanese home holds an iconic status in both foreign and indigenous under...