KU News: Author, columnist Margaret Renkl to give talk; new book explores history of sake

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Author, columnist Margaret Renkl to give Fall 2025 Spencer Lecture

LAWRENCE — Bestselling author and New York Times contributing columnist Margaret Renkl will present the fall 2025 Kenneth A. Spencer Lecture for the University of Kansas in conversation with Megan Kaminski, poet and KU professor of environmental studies, at 7 p.m. Nov. 3 at Liberty Hall. Free tickets are now available for the event. A second event earlier Nov. 3 will offer attendees an opportunity to visit a Douglas County native prairie with Renkl and area land stewards.

History of Japan’s signature beverage sake shared in new book

LAWRENCE — A new book from a University of Kansas professor of history explores sake’s evolution from homebrew to flavored varieties while tracing its cultural significance and global rise in Japan. “Kanpai: The History of Sake,” which is the first such history in English, is published by Reaktion Books.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Emily Ryan, The Commons, 785-864-6293, [email protected]
Author, columnist Margaret Renkl to give fall 2025 Spencer Lecture

LAWRENCE — Bestselling author and New York Times contributing columnist Margaret Renkl will present the fall 2025 Kenneth A. Spencer Lecture for the University of Kansas in conversation with Megan Kaminski, poet and KU professor of environmental studies.

The event, sponsored by The Commons, will take place at 7 p.m. Nov. 3 at Liberty Hall. Free tickets are now available for the event, which will be followed by a book-signing, with books for sale from Raven Book Store.

A second event earlier Nov. 3 will offer attendees an opportunity to visit a native prairie with Renkl and area land stewards.

Based in Nashville, Renkl centers themes of grief, love, loss and the American South in her work within the context of the natural world. In her biweekly New York Times column, she keeps readers connected to the shifts of seasons.

She is the author of “Late Migrations: A Natural History of Love and Loss” (2019), “Graceland, at Last: Notes on Hope and Heartache From the American South” (2021) and “The Comfort of Crows: A Backyard Year” (2023), which won the 2024 Southern Book Prize and is a New York Times bestseller. Her latest book, “Leaf, Cloud, Crow: A Weekly Backyard Journal” (October 2024), is a companion to “The Comfort of Crows” that offers 52 writing prompts and advice for studying the natural world.

“Margaret Renkl’s work demonstrates how intimate observation of the natural world becomes a practice of fierce love — love that doesn’t shy away from grief or difficulty but instead transforms witnessing into action,” Kaminski said. “Her ability to hold both wonder and heartbreak, to find hope within loss, speaks to the kind of reciprocal relationship with place that I believe is essential for our time. I’m thrilled to explore with her how paying attention to our backyards can grow into a form of environmental advocacy.”

Event at Akin Prairie

A related event to Renkl’s talk will take place from 2:30 to 4 p.m. Nov. 3 at Akin Prairie, a 16-acre native prairie in southeastern Douglas County. Joining Renkl and Kaminski are Patti Beedles, Kansas Land Trust conservation coordinator, and Andie Perdue, board member of the Outdoors Unscripted Festival. The event is an opportunity to learn about the tract of land and its role in prairie ecosystems, and, inspired by Renkl’s work, attendees can participate in their own writing/response practice to the prairie. The event will close with a poetry reading by Kaminski, who is completing work around the site through a SOSAA (Showcasing Open Space through Accessible Adventure) grant from the Outdoors Unscripted Festival.

Those interested in riding a bus from the Lawrence campus to the event can meet at 2 p.m. Nov. 3 at the bus stop in front of Haworth Hall. Register to attend.

About the Spencer Lecture

The Kenneth A. Spencer Lecture, hosted by The Commons, is an endowed lecture dedicated to bringing leading thinkers to address the KU and regional communities. Featured speakers have included Rebecca Solnit, Eve Ewing, Jose Antonio Vargas, Jonny Sun and Robin Wall Kimmerer.

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A study by global analytics firm Lightcast quantifies

KU’s annual statewide impact at $7.8 billion.

https://economicdevelopment.ku.edu/impact

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Contact: Jon Niccum, KU News Service, 785-864-7633, [email protected]
History of Japan’s signature beverage sake shared in new book

 

LAWRENCE — In 2024, the Japanese government successfully petitioned UNESCO to declare the venerable process of sake brewing an “intangible cultural heritage.”

But the history of sake itself is largely unknown to most people outside of Japan.

“Like sushi, it’s one of the touchstones of Japanese cuisine,” said Eric Rath, professor of history at the University of Kansas.

“You can’t not run into sake if you look at Japanese food culture, if you look at ritual, if you look at daily life. It’s there in many different forms.”

Rath’s new book, titled “Kanpai: The History of Sake,” which is the first such history in English, explores sake’s evolution from homebrew to flavored varieties while tracing its cultural significance and global rise. The work is published by Reaktion Books.

“Sake is made with water, rice and a mold called koji. There’s this notion that because these are very simple ingredients, this process is something timeless that’s been unchanged for millennia. But when you look at the history, you see how the recipe has changed, and it continues to evolve,” Rath said.

The beverage’s place in Japanese society has also changed. Rath notes sake only occupies 5% of the country’s alcohol market today. That’s somewhat unexpected, given that the word “sake” can mean alcoholic beverage, synonymous with booze. Statistically, however, four times more beer is consumed in Japan.

Having researched Japanese food culture for the last 25 years, Rath was surprised to learn no one had written an academic history of sake in English.

“That’s a huge gap,” he said.

“You get a lot of individuals who write about sake appreciation, what brand to buy and how sake is made. There are some great sake educators out there, but there’s no sake history, and so that results in misconceptions. A lot of people get left out of the story. There’s a whole side of home brewing I talk about in my book. Also, women played a great role in sake brewing in the medieval period, and sometimes they get omitted or their contributions get downplayed.”

A misconception also lingers regarding what sake fundamentally is.

“It’s not a rice wine. It’s made completely differently and brewed more like a beer,” Rath said.

“I want people to know its place in Japanese culture. I want them to know that the recipe for it has changed, and my book includes recipes for sake. I did a little home brewing, too, along the way, and that was fun. I want to show what the government’s done in the last century to change sake, both for the good and for the bad.”

For instance, the Japanese government banned sake home brewing in 1899. It later reinforced the ban to increase tax revenue from commercial sales. But in the 1970s, home brewing became a touchstone for peace activists who were opposed to the building of an airport at Narita (in the Greater Tokyo area).

“Home brewing turned into a rallying point for them, arguing it was protected by the Japanese constitution. They had the ‘freedom to brew.’ But ultimately the government said, ‘No, you can’t brew at home.’ Yet people still do,” Rath said.

The book’s title, “Kanpai,” refers to the traditional toast uttered when drinking in a group setting. This literally translates to “dry cup.”

“It’s an adaptation of the British word ‘cheers.’ The story is that Japanese naval officers wanted some kind of phrase to toast the emperor, counterpart to what the British were doing. So they came up with kanpai,” he said.

He said Americans have increasingly embraced sake.

“It’s really growing in the United States,” he said. “We have around 20 craft breweries in North America. A lot of these places have opened in the last five years, and they’re doing some incredible things. There are breweries in Tennessee, Arkansas, California. Brooklyn alone has three sake breweries.”

A 26-year veteran of KU, Rath teaches a course on the history of sushi. His previous book, “Oishii: The History of Sushi,” (Reaktion Books/University of Chicago Press, 2021) offers the first comprehensive chronicle of sushi written in English. He is also a member of the editorial team for Gastronomica: The Journal for Food Studies.

Personally, Rath enjoys many variations of sake flavors and types. But when in Japan, “I like to drink something local,” he said.

“The amazing thing about sake is you can try it at different temperatures. With the same bottle, you can have it chilled or room temperature or heated up a little bit. The flavor profile will change so much. It’s the only alcoholic beverage I know of that you can do that with.”

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

[email protected]

https://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

 

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