Joy Hendry
Japan at Play
Joy Hendry
Japan at Play
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- Produkterinnerung
First Published in 2006. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
First Published in 2006. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. August 2005
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 458g
- ISBN-13: 9780415379373
- ISBN-10: 0415379377
- Artikelnr.: 22466486
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. August 2005
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 458g
- ISBN-13: 9780415379373
- ISBN-10: 0415379377
- Artikelnr.: 22466486
Joy Hendry, Massimo Raveri
List of Figures Acknowledgements Conventions List of Contributors
Introduction Massimo Raveri 1.The Japanese Tattoo: Play or Purpose? Joy
Hendry 2.Interpreting the World as a Ken Game Sepp Linnhart 3. Kono Saki
(The Japanese Gay Scene): Communities or Just Playing Around? Wim Lunsig 4.
Karakuri : The Ludic Relationship Between Man and the Machine in Tokugawa
Japan Yamaguchi Masao 5.Ludic Elements in Japanese Attitudes to Tsukuru
Maria-Dolores Rodriguez del Alisar 6.Saved by the Love song: Japanese Rock
Fans, Memory and the Pursuit of Pleasure Carolyn S. Stevens 7. Inakazumo ,
Fun and Socially Sanctioned Violence Michael Ashkenazi 8.At the
Interstices: Drinking, Management, and Temporary Groups in a Local Japanese
Organisation Eyal Ben-Ari 9.Training for Leisure: Karaoke and the
Seriousness of Play in Japan William H. Kelly 10. Is there a Japanese way
of Playing? Rupert Cox 11.When a Goal is not a Goal: Japanese School
Football Players Working Hard at their Game Simone Dalla Chiesa
12.Professional Soccer in Japan John Horne 13.A Spell inJapan in the world
of Play with Johan Huizinga Jan van Bremen 14. Countryside Reinvented for
Urban Tourists: Rural Transformation in the Japanese Muraokoshi Movement
Okpyo Moon 15.From Curing and Playing, to Leisure. Two Japanese Hot
Springs: Arima and Kinosaki Onsen 16.Illegal Fishing and Power Games Ulrike
Nennstiel 17. Hunters and Hikers: Rival Recreations in the Japanese Forest
John Knight 18.Japan at Play in TDL: The Dialectics of Asobi and REJA
Introduction Massimo Raveri 1.The Japanese Tattoo: Play or Purpose? Joy
Hendry 2.Interpreting the World as a Ken Game Sepp Linnhart 3. Kono Saki
(The Japanese Gay Scene): Communities or Just Playing Around? Wim Lunsig 4.
Karakuri : The Ludic Relationship Between Man and the Machine in Tokugawa
Japan Yamaguchi Masao 5.Ludic Elements in Japanese Attitudes to Tsukuru
Maria-Dolores Rodriguez del Alisar 6.Saved by the Love song: Japanese Rock
Fans, Memory and the Pursuit of Pleasure Carolyn S. Stevens 7. Inakazumo ,
Fun and Socially Sanctioned Violence Michael Ashkenazi 8.At the
Interstices: Drinking, Management, and Temporary Groups in a Local Japanese
Organisation Eyal Ben-Ari 9.Training for Leisure: Karaoke and the
Seriousness of Play in Japan William H. Kelly 10. Is there a Japanese way
of Playing? Rupert Cox 11.When a Goal is not a Goal: Japanese School
Football Players Working Hard at their Game Simone Dalla Chiesa
12.Professional Soccer in Japan John Horne 13.A Spell inJapan in the world
of Play with Johan Huizinga Jan van Bremen 14. Countryside Reinvented for
Urban Tourists: Rural Transformation in the Japanese Muraokoshi Movement
Okpyo Moon 15.From Curing and Playing, to Leisure. Two Japanese Hot
Springs: Arima and Kinosaki Onsen 16.Illegal Fishing and Power Games Ulrike
Nennstiel 17. Hunters and Hikers: Rival Recreations in the Japanese Forest
John Knight 18.Japan at Play in TDL: The Dialectics of Asobi and REJA
List of Figures Acknowledgements Conventions List of Contributors
Introduction Massimo Raveri 1.The Japanese Tattoo: Play or Purpose? Joy
Hendry 2.Interpreting the World as a Ken Game Sepp Linnhart 3. Kono Saki
(The Japanese Gay Scene): Communities or Just Playing Around? Wim Lunsig 4.
Karakuri : The Ludic Relationship Between Man and the Machine in Tokugawa
Japan Yamaguchi Masao 5.Ludic Elements in Japanese Attitudes to Tsukuru
Maria-Dolores Rodriguez del Alisar 6.Saved by the Love song: Japanese Rock
Fans, Memory and the Pursuit of Pleasure Carolyn S. Stevens 7. Inakazumo ,
Fun and Socially Sanctioned Violence Michael Ashkenazi 8.At the
Interstices: Drinking, Management, and Temporary Groups in a Local Japanese
Organisation Eyal Ben-Ari 9.Training for Leisure: Karaoke and the
Seriousness of Play in Japan William H. Kelly 10. Is there a Japanese way
of Playing? Rupert Cox 11.When a Goal is not a Goal: Japanese School
Football Players Working Hard at their Game Simone Dalla Chiesa
12.Professional Soccer in Japan John Horne 13.A Spell inJapan in the world
of Play with Johan Huizinga Jan van Bremen 14. Countryside Reinvented for
Urban Tourists: Rural Transformation in the Japanese Muraokoshi Movement
Okpyo Moon 15.From Curing and Playing, to Leisure. Two Japanese Hot
Springs: Arima and Kinosaki Onsen 16.Illegal Fishing and Power Games Ulrike
Nennstiel 17. Hunters and Hikers: Rival Recreations in the Japanese Forest
John Knight 18.Japan at Play in TDL: The Dialectics of Asobi and REJA
Introduction Massimo Raveri 1.The Japanese Tattoo: Play or Purpose? Joy
Hendry 2.Interpreting the World as a Ken Game Sepp Linnhart 3. Kono Saki
(The Japanese Gay Scene): Communities or Just Playing Around? Wim Lunsig 4.
Karakuri : The Ludic Relationship Between Man and the Machine in Tokugawa
Japan Yamaguchi Masao 5.Ludic Elements in Japanese Attitudes to Tsukuru
Maria-Dolores Rodriguez del Alisar 6.Saved by the Love song: Japanese Rock
Fans, Memory and the Pursuit of Pleasure Carolyn S. Stevens 7. Inakazumo ,
Fun and Socially Sanctioned Violence Michael Ashkenazi 8.At the
Interstices: Drinking, Management, and Temporary Groups in a Local Japanese
Organisation Eyal Ben-Ari 9.Training for Leisure: Karaoke and the
Seriousness of Play in Japan William H. Kelly 10. Is there a Japanese way
of Playing? Rupert Cox 11.When a Goal is not a Goal: Japanese School
Football Players Working Hard at their Game Simone Dalla Chiesa
12.Professional Soccer in Japan John Horne 13.A Spell inJapan in the world
of Play with Johan Huizinga Jan van Bremen 14. Countryside Reinvented for
Urban Tourists: Rural Transformation in the Japanese Muraokoshi Movement
Okpyo Moon 15.From Curing and Playing, to Leisure. Two Japanese Hot
Springs: Arima and Kinosaki Onsen 16.Illegal Fishing and Power Games Ulrike
Nennstiel 17. Hunters and Hikers: Rival Recreations in the Japanese Forest
John Knight 18.Japan at Play in TDL: The Dialectics of Asobi and REJA