Shoji Lamp Various styles and designs of shoji lamps here!

Oriental Furniture LMPOLV-Walnut Ling Shoji Lamp Color: Dark Walnut

Posted on December 5, 2009

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Product Description
Oriental Furniture LMPOLV-Walnut This Ling shoji lamp from Oriental Furniture is sleek, chic, and contemporary. This Asian inspired shoji lamp's smooth cylindrical appearance and fabric shade provide plenty of modern appeal in an ever increasing demand for more minimal and elegant lamps. Available in two base finishes, this shoji lamp is UL approved and requires one 25 watt bulb. Features: -Ling theme -Shoji lamp -Fabric shade -Cylindrical shape -UL approved -Takes one 25 watt bulb -Available in two finishes! -Overall dimensions: 19" H x 6" W x 6" D Color: Dark Walnut
Oriental Furniture LMPOLV-Walnut Ling Shoji Lamp Color: Dark Walnut

Oriental Furniture LMPKHARB-Walnut Kharbarousk Shoji Lamp Color: Dark Walnut

Posted on December 5, 2009


Product Description
Oriental Furniture LMPKHARB-Walnut This Kharbarosk lamp from Oriental Furniture has a compact and distinctively elegant design. Featuring a cylindrical base with a wrap around wooden lattice design and fluid, organic curves, this shoji styled lamp also has white rice paper backings to create a soft ambient atmosphere. Available in 3 finishes, this oriental lamp is UL approved and requires one 40 watt bulb. Features: -Kharbarousk theme -Asian shoji lamp -Cylindrical base -Wrap around wooden lattice design -White rice paper backing -UL approved -Takes one 40 watt bulb -Available in black, dark walnut, and honey! -Overall dimensions: 18" H x 10" W x 10" D Color: Dark Walnut
Oriental Furniture LMPKHARB-Walnut Kharbarousk Shoji Lamp Color: Dark Walnut

Shots in the Dark: Japan, Zen, and the West

Posted on September 11, 2009

Shots in the Dark: Japan, Zen, and the West (Buddhism and Modernity)

Review
"Shots in the Dark addresses an important cluster of issues concerning cultural translation and discursive formations of the 'spiritual East.' It offers an unusual perspective on Orientalism, rare, or possibly non-existent among critical literature available in English." - Tomoko Masuzawa, author of The Invention of World Religions"

In the years after World War II, Westerners and Japanese alike elevated Zen to the quintessence of spirituality in Japan. Pursuing the sources...
Buy Shots in the Dark: Japan, Zen, and the West at Amazon

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