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The Anatomy of Loneliness in Japan by Chikako Ozawa-de Silva
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The Anatomy of Loneliness:
By Chikako Ozawa-de Silva
410 pages
9 hours
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Description
Loneliness is everybody’s business. Neither a pathology nor a rare affliction, it is part of the human condition. Severe and chronic loneliness, however, is a threat to individual and public health and appears to be on the rise. In this illuminating book, anthropologist Chikako Ozawa-de Silva examines loneliness in Japan, focusing on rising rates of suicide, the commodification of intimacy, and problems impacting youth. Moving from interviews with college students, to stories of isolation following the 2011 natural and nuclear disasters, to online discussions in suicide website chat rooms, Ozawa-de Silva points to how society itself can exacerbate experiences of loneliness. A critical work for our world, The Anatomy of Loneliness considers how to turn the tide of the “lonely society” and calls for a deeper understanding of empathy and subjective experience on both individual and systemic levels.
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PUBLISHER:
University of California Press
RELEASED:
Dec 7, 2021
Living for Jesus and Japan Uchimura Kanzo by Eerdmans - Ebook | Scribd
Living for Jesus and Japan: The Social and Theological Thought of Uchimura Kanzo
By Eerdmans
Description
In this interdisciplinary, multi-angled approach to Uchimura Kanzo, the contributors shed light on the inner logic, meanings, and modes of interaction between the religious and social thought observable in Kanzo.
Contributors:
Andrew E. Barshay
Kei Chiba
Shin Chiba
Kyougae Lee
Hiroshi Miura
Tsunao Ohyama
Hiroshi Shibuya
Takashi Shogimen
Yasuhiro Takahashi
Kunichika Yagyu
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Living for Jesus and Japan: The Social and Theological Thought of Uchimura Kanzo Paperback – 1 November 2013
by Hiroshi Shibuya (Author)
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Uchimura Kanzo (1861-1930) was an independent, original, and thought-provoking pioneer of Christianity in modern Japan. His theological values were organically linked with his aspiration for living and practicing such evangelical ideas as prophetic existence, neighborly love, social justice, pacifism, patriotism, and internationalism in the sphere of public life. Uchimura's commitment to the interaction between religious thought and social life is apparent in his well-known epitaph: -I for Japan; Japan for the World; the World for Christ; and All for God.-
In this interdisciplinary, multi-angled approach to Uchimura Kanzo, the contributors shed light on the inner logic, meanings, and modes of interaction between the religious and social thought observable in Kanzo.
Contributors
Andrew E. Barshay
Kei Chiba
Shin Chiba
Kyougae Lee
Hiroshi Miura
Tsunao Ohyama
Hiroshi Shibuya
Takashi Shogimen
Yasuhiro Takahashi
Kunichika Yagyu
Read less
Print length
223 pages
Language
English
Publisher
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
Publication date
1 November 2013
Product description
Review
Thomas John Hastings--Japan International Christian University Foundation"In these essays on Uchimura Kanz?, readers will discover fresh perspectives on the United States, love of God and nation, pacifism, missionary movement, Bible, church, and Christian doctrine from one of the most extraordinary Christians of late Meiji and Taish? Japan. Written mainly by scholars working in Japan, this collection represents an outstanding contribution to Uchimura scholarship in English."Trent Maxey--Amherst College"Indicating how nationality formed the uncrossable horizon of Uchimura's thought, ' these essays explore the social and theological thought of one of the most prominent Christian figures in modern Japan. The topical approach of this volume complements more biographical approaches to Uchimura Kanz?, resulting in a compelling account of his struggle to articulate and live a biblical faith during a turbulent era of nation-formation and imperial expansion."
"Theological Studies" Uchimura Kanzo was a representative Christian leader and thinker in the Maiji and Taisho periods of Japan. He is well known as a prolific biblical commentator, a pacifist Christian thinker, and an advocate of a nonchurch type of Christianity. . . . He is worthy of continued study and remains inspiring and refreshing not merely as a Christian thinker but also as a social thinker. Thomas John Hastings--Japan International Christian University Foundation"In these essays on Uchimura Kanz?, readers will discover fresh perspectives on the United States, love of God and nation, pacifism, missionary movement, Bible, church, and Christian doctrine from one of the most extraordinary Christians of late Meiji and Taish? Japan. Written mainly by scholars working in Japan, this collection represents an outstanding contribution to Uchimura scholarship in English."Trent Maxey--Amherst College"Indicating how nationality formed the uncrossable horizon of Uchimura's thought, ' these essays explore the social and theological thought of one of the most prominent Christian figures in modern Japan. The topical approach of this volume complements more biographical approaches to Uchimura Kanz?, resulting in a compelling account of his struggle to articulate and live a biblical faith during a turbulent era of nation-formation and imperial expansion."
Thomas John Hastings
--Japan International Christian University Foundation
"In these essays on Uchimura Kanzo, readers will discover fresh perspectives on the United States, love of God and nation, pacifism, missionary movement, Bible, church, and Christian doctrine from one of the most extraordinary Christians of late Meiji and Taisho Japan. Written mainly by scholars working in Japan, this collection represents an outstanding contribution to Uchimura scholarship in English."
Trent Maxey
--Amherst College
"Indicating how nationality formed the uncrossable horizon of Uchimura s thought, these essays explore the social and theological thought of one of the most prominent Christian figures in modern Japan. The topical approach of this volume complements more biographical approaches to Uchimura Kanzo, resulting in a compelling account of his struggle to articulate and live a biblical faith during a turbulent era of nation-formation and imperial expansion."
"Journal for Japanese Studies"
The field of Unchimua Kanzo s theology presents opportunities for further exploration. The Shibuya and Chiba volume is a stimulating start. "
Thomas John Hastings
--Japan International Christian University Foundation
-In these essays on Uchimura Kanzo, readers will discover fresh perspectives on the United States, love of God and nation, pacifism, missionary movement, Bible, church, and Christian doctrine from one of the most extraordinary Christians of late Meiji and Taisho Japan. Written mainly by scholars working in Japan, this collection represents an outstanding contribution to Uchimura scholarship in English.-
Trent Maxey
--Amherst College
-Indicating how nationality formed 'the uncrossable horizon of Uchimura's thought, ' these essays explore the social and theological thought of one of the most prominent Christian figures in modern Japan. The topical approach of this volume complements more biographical approaches to Uchimura Kanzo, resulting in a compelling account of his struggle to articulate and live a biblical faith during a turbulent era of nation-formation and imperial expansion.-
Journal for Japanese Studies
-The field of Unchimua Kanzo's theology presents opportunities for further exploration. The Shibuya and Chiba volume is a stimulating start.-
About the Author
Shibuya Hiroshi is professor emeritus at Meiji GakuinUniversity, Tokyo, Japan. His other books include TheRevolutionary Ideas of Puritanism and UchimuraKanzo in Modern History of Thought.
Chiba Shin is a professor at the International ChristianUniversity, Tokyo, Japan. He has also coeditedBuilding New Pathways to Peace andChristian Ethics in Ecumenical Context.
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Product details
- Publisher : William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company (1 November 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 223 pages
Religion and Psychotherapy in Modern Japan (Routledge Contemporary Japan Series Book 54) - Kindle edition by Harding, Christopher, Fumiaki, Iwata, Shin’ichi, Yoshinaga. Politics & Social Sciences Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.
[독서생활] <근대일본에서의 종교와 정신치료> (2015, 영어)
- 나의 관심분야이기도 한데 중요한 책이라고 한다.
- 일본에서의 이 분야에 상당하는 한국의 것은 무엇일까? 한국은 기독교계 수입품들? 무교 전통? 한국계 미국여성 노라 옥자 켈러의 <위안부>라는 책에서 이 면이 다루어진다.
Is Japan Religious? | Kavanagh | Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture
Is Japan Religious?
Abstract
The popular image of Japan and religion presents something of a paradox. On the one hand, large cross-cultural surveys frequently present Japan as a country of non-believers, where only 10–15% of the population selfidentify as religious and the vast majority rank religion as being of little importance to their lives. Yet, any visitor to Japan is likely to be struck by the sheer number of Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples that dot the landscape, and the diverse array of festivals (matsuri) that are performed at these sites. In this article, we argue that the apparent paradox is actually an illusion generated by the unwarranted ethnocentric assumption that religion everywhere must resemble the features of the Abrahamic faiths that are predominant in Western societies. To make our case we first review recurrent theoretical and definitional debates concerning religion and examine how they relate to the Japanese context. Second, we explore patterns in contemporary data from an online survey of N = 1,000 Japanese that asked about religious beliefs and practices. We illustrate through the results obtained that to understand religion in Japan it is necessary to move beyond theocentric approaches and expectations that religious belief must be tied to religious identities or exclusive membership in a given tradition. To conclude, we argue that the patterns observed in Japan demonstrate that scholars who wish to explore religion cross-culturally need to take greater account of orthopraxic cultural contexts and distinguish between ‘theocentric’ doctrinal beliefs and broader supernatural beliefs.
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PDF (PRICE: £18.00 )DOI: 10.1558/jsrnc.39187
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