Merging Folklore and Archaeology: Publication of 'Life in the Millet-Growing Region (Northern Tohoku)', Culminating 50 Years of Research
On May 1, 2026, Ichirosha published 'Life in the Millet-Growing Region (Northern Tohoku): The Origin of Folk Archaeology' by Fumiaki Nakui and Yoshie Nakui. This 650-page comprehensive research book documents the pre-mechanization lifestyle and culture in the mountainous regions of northern Tohoku through measured drawings of folk implements, photographs, and oral histories collected since the 1980s.
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- 📰 Published: May 23, 2026 at 17:00
- 🔍 Collected: May 23, 2026 at 08:31
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Example of the paperback appearance and illustration pages
This book is a comprehensive research volume documenting the pre-mechanization lifestyle and culture in the mountainous, millet-growing regions of northern Tohoku through measured drawings of folk implements, photographs, and oral history interviews. Based on field research continuously conducted by authors Fumiaki Nakui and Yoshie Nakui from the 1980s to the 2000s, the book compiles 650 pages detailing the lifestyle techniques, subsistence activities, and tool culture that remained in the mountain villages of northern Tohoku.
Documenting Folk Implements Within "Daily Life"
Rather than being a mere catalog of folk implements, this book records "how they were used" within the overall flow of daily life.
In addition to interviews with community elders, the research involved creating measured drawings of actual artifacts whenever possible. This approach stereoscopically reconstructs the annual lifestyle culture interwoven with millet cultivation, slash-and-burn farming, hunting, charcoal making, firewood gathering, house building, clothing production, animal husbandry, and annual events.
Furthermore, the book records differences in local terminology and usage methods, anticipating its utilization as foundational data for the study of tangible folk materials.
The Perspective of "Folk Archaeology" Connecting Folklore and Archaeology
The end of the book includes six essays and reflections by both authors. It features problem-setting discussions on how to connect folk materials to archaeological research and how to record, preserve, and utilize tangible folk cultural properties. This book holds significant methodological value for cross-disciplinary research in folklore, archaeology, and museology.
Book Overview
Title: Life in the Millet-Growing Region (Northern Tohoku): The Origin of Folk Archaeology
Authors: Fumiaki Nakui and Yoshie Nakui
Publisher: Ichirosha
Release Date: May 1, 2026
ISBN: 9784990598648
Format: A4 size
Pages: 650 pages
Specifications: Paperback or Kindle eBook
Price: Paperback 8,800 JPY (tax included) / Kindle eBook version 7,700 JPY (tax included)
Thickness: Approx. 3.5 cm
Weight: Approx. 2 kg
Main Contents
Millet cultivation and slash-and-burn farming
Gathering wild vegetables, nuts, and mushrooms
Hunting and Matagi culture
Charcoal making and mountain labor
House building and roof thatching
Breeding and transportation by cattle and horses
Bark and straw processing techniques
Work clothes, footwear, and textiles
Rites of passage and annual events
Communal work, bartering, and migrant labor
* Please see the publisher's detailed page for the full table of contents.
Planned Exhibition at the Japanese Archaeological Association Book Exchange
The book is scheduled to be exhibited at the book exchange event hosted by the Japanese Archaeological Association (Venue: Aoyama Gakuin University) on Sunday, May 24, 2026.
Author Profiles
Fumiaki Nakui
A folk archaeologist who has long researched mountain village culture, folk implements, and lifestyle techniques in northern Tohoku. Representative of the Material Culture Research Institute, Ichirosha. He has served as a curator at the Iwate Prefectural Museum, a part-time lecturer at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Iwate University, and the honorary director of the Oda Folk History Museum in Kuzumaki Town. Since the 1960s, he has engaged in Jomon culture research, and from the 1980s onward, he has continued oral history research and studies on folk implements, bark products, millet culture, and mountain village subsistence throughout northern Tohoku. He promotes research in "folk archaeology," merging archaeology and folklore, and works on the preservation and utilization of tangible folk materials.
Achievement Introduction: Fumiaki Nakui Research Trends Page
Yoshie Nakui
Proponent of documentary preservation studies based on the research of lifestyle culture, folk implements, food, clothing, housing, and tangible folk cultural properties, primarily in northern Tohoku. Author of "Recommendation for Measured Drawings" (実測図のすすめ). Researcher at the Material Culture Research Institute, Ichirosha. She has served as a part-time lecturer at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Iwate University, and the honorary director of the Kitakami Mountainous Region Folk History Museum in Miyako City. Since the 1980s, she has been involved in research and educational activities centered on creating measured drawings of folk implements, working to record and preserve local lifestyle techniques and folk tool culture. She has also participated in research for national important tangible folk cultural properties such as "Nanbu Toji," "Mountain Village Production Tools Collection of Kawai Village in the Kitakami Mountainous Region," and "Ani Matagi Tools."
Achievement Introduction: Yoshie Nakui Research Trends Page
Book Information
Paperback (Print on Demand) Amazon Sales Page
Kindle eBook (Kindle Unlimited compatible) Amazon Sales Page
* Orders can also be placed through bookstores.
Publisher Book List:
Ichirosha Book List
This book is a comprehensive research volume documenting the pre-mechanization lifestyle and culture in the mountainous, millet-growing regions of northern Tohoku through measured drawings of folk implements, photographs, and oral history interviews. Based on field research continuously conducted by authors Fumiaki Nakui and Yoshie Nakui from the 1980s to the 2000s, the book compiles 650 pages detailing the lifestyle techniques, subsistence activities, and tool culture that remained in the mountain villages of northern Tohoku.
Documenting Folk Implements Within "Daily Life"
Rather than being a mere catalog of folk implements, this book records "how they were used" within the overall flow of daily life.
In addition to interviews with community elders, the research involved creating measured drawings of actual artifacts whenever possible. This approach stereoscopically reconstructs the annual lifestyle culture interwoven with millet cultivation, slash-and-burn farming, hunting, charcoal making, firewood gathering, house building, clothing production, animal husbandry, and annual events.
Furthermore, the book records differences in local terminology and usage methods, anticipating its utilization as foundational data for the study of tangible folk materials.
The Perspective of "Folk Archaeology" Connecting Folklore and Archaeology
The end of the book includes six essays and reflections by both authors. It features problem-setting discussions on how to connect folk materials to archaeological research and how to record, preserve, and utilize tangible folk cultural properties. This book holds significant methodological value for cross-disciplinary research in folklore, archaeology, and museology.
Book Overview
Title: Life in the Millet-Growing Region (Northern Tohoku): The Origin of Folk Archaeology
Authors: Fumiaki Nakui and Yoshie Nakui
Publisher: Ichirosha
Release Date: May 1, 2026
ISBN: 9784990598648
Format: A4 size
Pages: 650 pages
Specifications: Paperback or Kindle eBook
Price: Paperback 8,800 JPY (tax included) / Kindle eBook version 7,700 JPY (tax included)
Thickness: Approx. 3.5 cm
Weight: Approx. 2 kg
Main Contents
Millet cultivation and slash-and-burn farming
Gathering wild vegetables, nuts, and mushrooms
Hunting and Matagi culture
Charcoal making and mountain labor
House building and roof thatching
Breeding and transportation by cattle and horses
Bark and straw processing techniques
Work clothes, footwear, and textiles
Rites of passage and annual events
Communal work, bartering, and migrant labor
* Please see the publisher's detailed page for the full table of contents.
Planned Exhibition at the Japanese Archaeological Association Book Exchange
The book is scheduled to be exhibited at the book exchange event hosted by the Japanese Archaeological Association (Venue: Aoyama Gakuin University) on Sunday, May 24, 2026.
Author Profiles
Fumiaki Nakui
A folk archaeologist who has long researched mountain village culture, folk implements, and lifestyle techniques in northern Tohoku. Representative of the Material Culture Research Institute, Ichirosha. He has served as a curator at the Iwate Prefectural Museum, a part-time lecturer at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Iwate University, and the honorary director of the Oda Folk History Museum in Kuzumaki Town. Since the 1960s, he has engaged in Jomon culture research, and from the 1980s onward, he has continued oral history research and studies on folk implements, bark products, millet culture, and mountain village subsistence throughout northern Tohoku. He promotes research in "folk archaeology," merging archaeology and folklore, and works on the preservation and utilization of tangible folk materials.
Achievement Introduction: Fumiaki Nakui Research Trends Page
Yoshie Nakui
Proponent of documentary preservation studies based on the research of lifestyle culture, folk implements, food, clothing, housing, and tangible folk cultural properties, primarily in northern Tohoku. Author of "Recommendation for Measured Drawings" (実測図のすすめ). Researcher at the Material Culture Research Institute, Ichirosha. She has served as a part-time lecturer at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Iwate University, and the honorary director of the Kitakami Mountainous Region Folk History Museum in Miyako City. Since the 1980s, she has been involved in research and educational activities centered on creating measured drawings of folk implements, working to record and preserve local lifestyle techniques and folk tool culture. She has also participated in research for national important tangible folk cultural properties such as "Nanbu Toji," "Mountain Village Production Tools Collection of Kawai Village in the Kitakami Mountainous Region," and "Ani Matagi Tools."
Achievement Introduction: Yoshie Nakui Research Trends Page
Book Information
Paperback (Print on Demand) Amazon Sales Page
Kindle eBook (Kindle Unlimited compatible) Amazon Sales Page
* Orders can also be placed through bookstores.
Publisher Book List:
Ichirosha Book List
FAQ
『雑穀地帯の暮らし〈北東北〉民俗考古学の原点』とはどのような書籍ですか?
北東北の山地・雑穀地帯における機械化以前の生活文化を、民具の実測図、写真、聞き書き調査を通じて総合的に記録した650頁にわたる研究書です。
本書の著者は誰ですか?
長年、北東北の山村文化や民具を調査研究してきた民俗考古学者の名久井文明氏と、記録保存学を提唱する名久井芳枝氏です。
本書の発行元と発売日はいつですか?
一芦舎(いちろしゃ)より、2026年5月1日に発売されました。
本書で提唱されている「民俗考古学」とは何ですか?
民俗学と考古学を融合させた視点であり、民俗資料を考古学研究にどう接続し、有形民俗文化財を記録・保存するかという研究方法論です。
本書の価格はいくらですか?
並製本は8,800円(税込)、Kindle電子書籍版は7,700円(税込)です。