2023/07/19

Amazon.com: Ian Reader: Books

Amazon.com: Ian Reader: Books



Results
Previously viewed


Religion in Contemporary Japan
by Ian Reader | Apr 1, 1991
4.8 out of 5 stars 20
Paperback




Shinto - Simple Guides
Part of: Simple Guides (14 books) | by Ian Reader and Simple Guides | Nov 4, 2008
4.6 out of 5 stars 38

Paperback

Audible Audiobook

Kindle
Other format: Audio CD




Pilgrimage and Buddhist Art
by Adriana Proser, Susan Beningson, et al. | Apr 20, 2010
4.4 out of 5 stars 6
Hardcover




Pilgrimage: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)
by Ian Reader | Jul 1, 2015

4.3 out of 5 stars 24
Paperback

Kindle




Religious Violence in Contemporary Japan: The Case of Aum Shinrikyo
by Ian Reader | May 1, 2000
4.9 out of 5 stars 9
Paperback

Kindle

Hardcover




Pilgrimage in the Marketplace (Routledge Studies in Pilgrimage, Religious Travel and Tourism)
Part of: Routledge Studies in Pilgrimage, Religious Travel and Tourism (17 books) | by Ian Reader | Sep 11, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars 1
Kindle

Hardcover
$159.00$159.00
List: $170.00$170.00

Get it Wed, Aug 2 - Mon, Aug 14

Paperback
$50.90$50.90
List: $54.95$54.95

Get it Fri, Aug 11 - Wed, Aug 23
More Buying Choices
$39.95(17 used & new offers)




Making Pilgrimages: Meaning and Practice in Shikoku
by Ian Reader | Dec 31, 2004
4.4 out of 5 stars 12
Paperback

Mass Market Paperback




Practically Religious: Worldly Benefits and the Common Religion of Japan
by Ian Reader and Tanabe Jr., George J, | Jan 1, 1998
4.5 out of 5 stars 6
Hardcover

Paperback
$20.21$20.21
List: $26.00$26.00

Ships to Australia
Only 1 left in stock - order soon.
More Buying Choices
$4.00(22 used & new offers)

Mass Market Paperback
$65.41$65.41
Usually ships within 6 to 7 days.
More Buying Choices
$19.72(15 used & new offers)




Christopher's Last Words (Artefacts of Artificial Intelligence)
Part of: Artefacts of Artificial Intelligence (3 books) | by Ian Reader | Jan 3, 2023
Kindle




Pilgrims Until We Die: Unending Pilgrimage in Shikoku
by Ian Reader and John Shultz | Jun 17, 2021
4.7 out of 5 stars 4
Kindle

Hardcover
$88.12$88.12
List: $99.00$99.00

Get it Tue, Aug 8 - Tue, Aug 29
Only 1 left in stock - order soon.
More Buying Choices
$27.56(8 used & new offers)

Paperback




Repressed (Artefacts of Artificial Intelligence)
Part of: Artefacts of Artificial Intelligence (3 books) | by Ian Reader | Feb 13, 2023
3.0 out of 5 stars 1
Kindle




Buddhist Tourism in Asia (Contemporary Buddhism)
Part of: Contemporary Buddhism (11 books) | by Courtney Bruntz, Brooke Schedneck , et al. | Mar 31, 2020
Kindle

Hardcover

Paperback




Hillhead 1909: Lanarkshire Sheet 6.06 (Old O.S. Maps of Glasgow)
by Ian Reader | Nov 1, 1985
5.0 out of 5 stars 2
Map




A.D.A.M.: Automated Domestic Administrative Machine (Artefacts of Artificial Intelligence)
Part of: Artefacts of Artificial Intelligence (3 books) | by Ian Reader | Nov 8, 2022
4.0 out of 5 stars 2
Kindle




A Poisonous Cocktail? Aum Shinrikyo's Path to Violence
by Ian Reader | May 31, 2003
5.0 out of 5 stars 3
Paperback
$23.47$23.47
Get it Wed, Aug 2 - Thu, Aug 17
Only 20 left in stock - order soon.
More Buying Choices
$17.47(8 used & new offers)




Simple Guide to Shinto, The Religion of Japan (Simple Guides to World Religions)
by Ian Reader | Jan 1, 1998
5.0 out of 5 stars 1
Paperback

===
Title Creator



===


Japanese Religion and Society: Paradigms of Structure and Change : Davis, Winston: Amazon.com.au: Books

Japanese Religion and Society: Paradigms of Structure and Change : Davis, Winston: Amazon.com.au: Books





See all 2 images



Follow the Author

Winston Davis

Japanese Religion and Society: Paradigms of Structure and Change Paperback – Illustrated, 13 February 1992
by Winston Davis (Author)
4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars 3 ratings

===

Preface

Part I: The Structure of Religious Groups


Chapter 1: Japanese Religious Affiliations: Motives and Obligations

Part II: The Dynamics of Social Conflict

Chapter 2: Pilgrimage and World Renewal

Chapter 3: The Cross and the Cudgel

Part III: The Dynamics of Social and Economic Change

Chapter 4: The Weber Thesis and the Economic Development of Japan

Chapter 5: Buddhism and Modernization

Chapter 6: Ittoen: The Work Ethic of a Buddhist Utopia

Part IV: Secularization and National Identity

Chapter 7: The Secularization of Japanese Religion

Chapter 8: Japan Theory and Civil Religion

Notes

Index
Read less
====

Nagasawa Kanaye The Spiritual Life of CA | PDF | Shinto | Bushido

Nagasawa Kanaye The Spiritual Life of CA | PDF | Shinto | Bushido

 28 pages
===

Nagasawa Kanaye: The Spiritual Life of California’s Japanese WinePioneer
Thomas Lockley, 
Nihon University College of Law, Tokyo, Japan.Abstract

===
In 1867, a young Japanese man, Nagasawa Kanaye (長澤鼎), joined the charismatic American Thomas Lake Harris’ sect called ‘The Brotherhood of the New Life.’ 

Harris’teachings were originally inspired by the eighteenth-century Swedish Lutheran mystic,Emanuel Swedenborg, but later drew on a variety of religious and spiritual influencesfrom around the world, including Japan. 

Harris went out of his way to attract Japanesemen to his American communities and the most loyal, Nagasawa, eventually became his leading disciple and acknowledged heir. Nagasawa’s spiritual involvement with Harrishas traditionally been played down in favor of his status as a Californian wine guru and pioneering Japanese immigrant. This study, however, analyzing personal diaries and correspondence, attempts to uncover how a young samurai, raised to despise Christianity, became Harris’ leading follower. It sheds new light on Nagasawa’s religious side and what exactly his membership and eventual leadership of ‘The Brotherhood of the New Life’ meant to him and other Harris disciples.
===


BritQuaker Memorial Lect - The George Gorman Memorial Fund

Memorial Lecture - The George Gorman Memorial Fund

The George Gorman Memorial Fund




Home
Applying to the Fund
Memorial Lecture
Trustees
Contact
Registerd Charity No. 286250







The George Gorman Memorial Lecture
As well as awarding grants, the Fund also organizes the ‘George Gorman Memorial Lecture’, given by a Quaker aged 18-35 at Britain Yearly Meeting Gatherings.

2021 Lecture - Sam Donaldson on "Old roots, new routes"
In the lecture Sam shares some of his own life story and reflects on some of his own £openings". He explores two questions "Who are we?" and "Where are we going?" as the Quaker community in Britain in these uncertain times of global pandemics, social, political and economic turmoil and climate catastrophes.

2017 Lecture - Tim Gee on "Movement Building from Stillness"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WP2rgC2toUM

2014 Lecture - ​Jessica Metheringham on "Equality: is it really what we think it is?"

1
2
3





Previous Lectures
2011 Lecture - Simon Best on "Radical, Sustainable Quakerism"
2007 Lecture - Heather Rowlands and Michael Eccles on "Journeys Through Faith"
2003 Lecture - Carol Robinson on "Heavenly Bodies"
1999 Lecture - Bronwen Mitchell
1995 Lecture - Julian Black on "Spiritual Journey"
1991 Lecture - Helen Carmichael on "Working In The City Within"
1989 Lecture - Robert Halliday on "Mind the Oneness"
​1986 Lecture - Hugh Pyper on "A Sense of Adventure"


Mind the Oneness Halliday, Robert 1991

Mind the Oneness: Halliday, Robert: 9780852452356: Amazon.com: Books





































Follow the Author

Robert Halliday
Follow





Mind the Oneness Paperback – January 1, 1991
by Robert Halliday (Author)


Mind the Oneness

Robert Halliday
5.00 1 rating


Mind the Oneness: the foundation of good Quaker business method 
is the book of the second George Gorman Lecture delivered 
at Britain Yearly Meeting's residential gathering in Aberdeen in 1989 
by Robert Halliday.

85 pages, Paperback

First published May 1, 1991
-----
This edition
Format 85 pages, Paperback
Published in 2010 by Quaker Books
===




























Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Quaker Home Service; First Edition (January 1, 1991)

Religious Discourse in Modern Japan | PDF | Shinto | Faith

Religious Discourse in Modern Japan | PDF | Shinto | Faith

501 pages
Religious Discourse in Modern Japan

Japan and Chirstianity PDF | PDF | Christian Denomination | Evangelicalism

Japan and Chirstianity PDF | PDF | Christian Denomination | Evangelicalism
ws
266 pages
Japan and Chirstianity PDF
===

===
Abstract

Since the mid-sixteenth century, Christianity has been notably active in Japan, and yet Japan remains one of the least-evangelized nations in the world. 

This dissertation is an attempt to work out an appropriate response to the question, “What are the main reasons why Christianity has not yet succeeded in Japan?” 

It investigates various factors, i.e. the societal, cultural, historical, missiological and political dimensions of Christianity in Japan, in searching for possible answers.

Generally, Christianity’s lack of quantitative success must be understood in the context of all of these factors, particularly,the worldview and political factors are the most salient ones.

This dissertation is based on extended literature study and draws from multiple sources across various disciplines, sources that are in English and generally based upon the work of both Japanese and Western scholars
===

Ideology and Christianity in Japan by Kiri Paramore |2009

Ideology and Christianity in Japan by Kiri Paramore | PDF

241 pages
Ideology and Christianity in Japan by Kiri Paramore

 Ideology and Christianity in Japan Ideology and Christianity in Japan shows the major role played by Christian-related discourse in the formation of early-modern and modern Japanese political ideology.

The book traces the historical development of anti-Christian ideas in Japan from the banning of Christianity by the Tokugawa shogunate in the early 1600s,to the use of Christian and anti-Christian ideology in the construction of modern Japanese state institutions at the end of the 1800s. 

Kiri Paramore recasts the history of Christian-related discourse in Japan in a new paradigm showing its influence on modern thought and politics and demonstrates the direct links between the development of ideology in the modern Japanese state, and the construction of political thought in the early Tokugawa shogunate.  

Demonstrating hitherto ignored links in Japanese history between modern and early-modern, and between religious and political elements, this book will appeal to students and scholars of Japanese history, religion and politics.  

Kiri Paramore is Assistant Professor in Japanese History at Leiden University, The Netherlands. He received his PhD in 2006 from the University of Tokyo.


===
Table of Contents

Introduction  
1. Japanese Christian Thought: Doctrinal Diversity or Civilizational Clash?  
2. Japanese Confucianism and Japanese Christianity: Parallels and Interactions  
3. Early Tokugawa Anti-Christian Discourse: Proclamations, Populist Literature and Diplomacy  
4. Attacking Non-Christian "Christians": Ideological Uses of Early Tokugawa Anti-Christian Discourse  
5. Mid- and Late Tokugawa Anti-Christian Discourse: Continuity and Change  
6. Meiji Anti-Christian Discourse: Modern National Ideology and Conservatism. 
 Conclusion.  
Bibliograpy


Religion in Contemporary Japan | Ian Reader 1991

Religion in Contemporary Japan | Ian Reader 1990
291 pages
Religion in Contemporary Japan
===


Religion in Contemporary Japan Paperback – April 1, 1991
by Ian Reader (Author)
4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 20 ratings
4.0 on Goodreads
61 ratings


What role does religion play in contemporary Japanese society and in the lives of Japanese people today? This text examines the major areas in which the Japanese participate in religious events, the role of religion in the social system and the underlying views within the Japanese religious world. 

Through a series of case studies of religion in action - at crowded temples and festivals, in austere Zen meditation halls, at home and at work, at dramatic fire rituals - it illustrates the immense variety, energy and colour inherent in Japanese religion. It also discusses the continued relevance and responses of religion in a rapidly modernizing and changing society.
===







































===
  • Ian READER, Religion in Contemporary Japon. London: Macmillan Press Led, 1991. 
  • Winston Davis, Japanese Religion and Society: Paradigms of Structure and Change. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1992. 
===
The publication of Religion in Contemporary Japon and Japanese Religion and Society is a most welcome event for scholars interested in Japanese spirituality, particularly for those of us who reside in Japan. 

Both books address the world of Japanese religion in which we live and are part of--even as non Japanese residents of this country-with the explicit aim of presenting an overall view of the subject. 

At a time when increased specialization has resulted in a growing number of works that deal only with limited aspects of the held, it is in-deed-to use a Japanese term-arigatai that scholars dare to reflect upon the knowledge they have gathered and "provide a comprehensive picture of the place, workings, and perspectives of religion in contemporary society and in the lives of Japanese people" (READER, p. xiv), so that "when readers put the book down, they will have a deeper knowledge of Japanese society and culture in general, and possibly even deeper insight into the nature of religion itself* (DAVIS, p. 1). 

The value of the works is only increased by the fact that both Reader and Davis are academics who have done their homework as far as specific, in depth research is concerned.
This reviewer happened to be on furlough in Europe when he read these volumes. Perhaps this accounts for the fact that I found them far more welcome reading than monographs on subjects often far removed from the interests of nonspecialists. Scholars on subjects relating to Japan are often asked to
"explain" the secrets of Japanese society and culture, and it is quite pleasant to be able to say, "Well, you might find something in these volumes I just happened to read.

Ian Reader's overview of religion in Japan focuses upon its contemporary forms and looks in particular at religious behavior and the ways in which religious themes are found in the lives of ordinary people. 

Based upon direct observation and participation during the years the author resided in the country, Reader succeeds in conveying the atmosphere - one of prayer and of laughter, as he correctly points out -in which religious action is performed in Japan.
After two introductory chapters on the major themes and framework of Jap.


===
From the United States
Zack Davisson
HALL OF FAME
5.0 out of 5 stars The best primer available - highly readable
Reviewed in the United States on August 14, 2003
Verified Purchase
"Religion in Contemporary Japan" is a highly enjoyable, informative and surprisingly readable book on the somewhat obscure subject of religion in contemporary Japan. As an MA student studying religion in Japan, this book was recommended as a starting place, and I found it invaluable.
Ian Reader lays out how religion is treated in Japan, what its general effect is on everyday life, and explores some of the more hidden corners of the Zen Buddhist temples and the new-new religions. Don't expect information on doctrines or specifics of any particular religion. This is far more of a sociological treatment than a theological one.
Of particular interest, I enjoyed his comments on the holy sites of Japan, and how they have been transformed to serve tourist interests. Also, his insights into the modern religion of Agonshu are very interesting, and highlights the modern "invention of tradition" found in Neo-pagan religions in the US. I found it interesting that this same phenomenon, of trying to link back to a mythical past, also existed in Japan.
Specific areas touched upon are "Turning to the Gods in times of trouble," "Unifying Traditions, " "Born Shinto, Die Buddhist," "Individuals, Ascetics and Expressions of Power," "Sites and Sights," "Actions, Amulets and the Expression of Meaning," "Spirits, Satellites and a User-friendly Religion."
18 people found this helpful
==
S. Smith
5.0 out of 5 stars I'd recommend this book for anyone interested in understanding the Japanese ...
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2015
Verified Purchase
I first heard Ian Reader on an interview on NPR and this is the first book of his that I've read. At this point I'm about 1/2 way through the book. I'd recommend this book for anyone interested in understanding the Japanese Culture. This is a view of the way the Japanese think of religion and full of info I don't think I would have found otherwise. It's well written and surprisingly easy to read for what one would think of as a very dry subject.
3 people found this helpful
==
hannahtheham
5.0 out of 5 stars Overall excellent book
Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2011
Verified Purchase
I had to buy this book for my Japanese Religions class. I found it very informative and easy to read at times. All the statistics sounded fine and quite contemporary.
One person found this helpful
==
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2016
Verified Purchase
Good
==
From other countries
rºº
5.0 out of 5 stars Very useful and interesting
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 20, 2013
Verified Purchase
(Sorry, English is not my first language, but I’ll try to make myself clear). It's very well written and interesting. It explores the field of religions very thoroughly and clearly and it enters some interesting matters. Despite the fact that it was written in the 80’, it feels brand new.
Report
真実
3.0 out of 5 stars これと言って
Reviewed in Japan on January 18, 2013
Verified Purchase
目新しい内容は無い。もう少し学術的な内容かと思って購入したが、当たり前のことばかりなので、購入を後悔してます。
One person found this helpful
Report
Translate review to English