Sokiku Nakatani Tea Room and Garden

Bibliography

 

For additional reading about tea rooms, tea ceremonies and Japanese tea gardens consult one of the following books or other materials available at the University Library at California State University, Sacramento. The full online catalog record for each of these titles is available by hitting the title link in each citation. These materials or others are available at your local library or through interlibrary loan.


Castile, R. (1971). The way of teaNew York, Weatherhill.

Fujioka, R. (1973). Tea ceremony utensil. New York, Weatherhill.

Graham, P.J. (1998). Tea of the sages: the art of senchaHonolulu, University of Hawaii Press.

Hammitzsch, H. (1988).  Zen in the art of the tea ceremonyNew York: Dutton.

Hayashiya, S. (1979). Chanoyu : Japanese tea ceremony. New York : Japan Society.

Hirota, D. (1995).  Wind in the pines: classic writings of the way of tea as a Buddhist pathFremont: Asian Humanities Press.

Honda, H. (1993). Vietnamese and Chinese ceramics used in the Japanese tea ceremony
            Singapore ; New York : Oxford University Press.

Kato, E. (2004). The tea ceremony and women’s empowerment in modern Japan. London, New York: RoutledgeCurzon.

Koren, L. (1994). Wabi-sabi for artists, designers, poets & philosophers. Berkeley: Stone Brige Press.

Lee, S. E. (1976). Tea taste in Japanese art. New York : Arno Press.

Macadam, J. P. (1974). Japanese arts and the tea ceremony. New York : Weatherhill.       

Nakamura, J. V. (1965). The Japanese tea ceremony; an interpretation for Occidentals
            Mount Vernon, N. Y., : Peter Pauper Press.

Okakura, K. (1956). The book of tea. Rutland, Vt.: C. E. Tuttle Co.           

Okakura, K. (2000).The book of tea.  Boston, MA : Tuttle Publishing.

Okakura, K. (2001). The book of tea. Boston, Mass. London : Shambhala.

Palace. Katsura. Pavilion. Shirakawa Bridge, Front of Tea Room, East Side of Shokintei [slide]

Sadler, A. L. (1963, c1962). Cha-no-yu, the Japanese tea ceremony. Rutland, Vt.: C. E. Tuttle Co.         

Satō, S. (2005). Tea ceremony. Boston : Tuttle Pub.

Seike, K. (1977). The art of Japanese joinery. New York : J. Weatherhill.

Sen, S. (1948). Cha-no-yu. Headquarters of the Ura Senke School of Tea Ceremonials
            Kyoto, Kogawa-Kashira.

Sen, S. (1984). Urasenke Chanoyu handbook one. Kyoto, Japan :Urasenke Foundation.

Tanaka, S. (1982). The tea ceremony. Tokyo; New York : Kodansha International : distributed in the U.S. by Harper & Row, New York.

Tanaka, S. (2000). The tea ceremony. Tokyo; New York : Kodansha International : Distributed in the U.S. by Kodansha America.

Varley, P., Isao, K., (1989).  Tea in Japan: essays on the history of chanoyuHonolulu: University of Hawaii Press.