Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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498 Religion and Spiritual Development: Japan ———. 1988. “Sumô and Popular Culture: The Tokugawa Period.” In The Japanese Trajectory: Modernization and Beyond. Edited by Gavan McCormack and Yoshio Sugimoto. New York: Cambridge University Press. Collcutt, Martin. 1986. “Buddhism: The Threat of Eradication.” In Japan in Transition: From Tokugawa to Meiji. Edited by Marius Jansen and Gilbert Rozman. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Dobbins, James C., ed. 1996. “The Legacy of Kuroda Toshio.” Special Issue of Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 23, nos. 3–4. Draeger, Donn F. 1973–1974. The Martial Arts and Ways of Japan. 3 vols. New York: Weatherhill. ———. 1977. “Martial Arts: Definitions and Approaches, an Introduction to the Concept of Combative Culture.” In Play: Anthropological Perspectives. Edited by Michael A. Salter. Proceedings of the Association for the Anthropological Study of Play. West Point, NY: Leisure Press. Draeger, Donn F., and Robert W. Smith. 1969. Asian Fighting Arts. Tokyo: Kodansha International. Emoto Shôji. 1988. “Bakumatsu kendô ni okeru nijûteki seikaku no keisei katei” (The formation of a split personality in fencing at the end of the Tokugawa period). In Irie and Sugie 1988. Endô Yoshinobu. 1994. Kindai Nihon guntai kyôiku shi kenkyû (History of Military Education in Early Modern Japan). Tokyo: Aoki Shoten. Fridell, Wilbur M. 1973. Japanese Shrine Mergers, 1902–12: State Shinto Moves to the Grassroots. Tokyo: Sophia University Press. Goodger, John. 1982. “Judo Players as a Gnostic Sect.” Religion 12. Grapard, Allan G. 1984. “Japan’s Ignored Cultural Revolution: The Separation of Shinto and Buddhist Divinities in Meiji (Shimbutsu Bunri) and a Case Study (Tônomine).” History of Religions 23, no. 3: 240–265. Guttmann, Allen. 1978. From Ritual to Record: The Nature of Modern Sports. New York: Columbia University Press. ———. 1994. Games and Empires: Modern Sports and Cultural Imperialism. New York: Columbia University Press. ———. 1992. The Olympics: A History of the Modern Games. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. Hanai Hitoshi. 1994. Kokusaijin Nitobe Inazô: bushidô to kirisutokyô (Nitobe Inazo as an Internationalist: Bushidô and Christianity). Chiba Prefecture: Hiroike Gakuen. Hayakawa Junzôrô et al., eds. 1915. Bujutsu sôsho (Martial Art Treatises). Tokyo: Kokusho Kankôkai. Hayashi Takatoshi. 1982. “Dainippon Butokukai no seikaku to tokuchô ni tsuite” (Characteristics and Features of the Greater Japan Martial Virtue Association). In Taiiku supôtsu shakaigaku kenkyû. Vol. 1. Tokyo: Dôwa Shôin. Herrigel, Eugen. 1936. “Die ritterliche Kunst des Bogenschiessens” (The Chivalrous Art of Archery). Nippon, Zeitschrift für Japanologie (Nippon: Journal for Japanese Studies) 2, no. 4: 193–212. ———. 1956. Yumi to Zen (Bow and Zen; originally Zen in der Kunst des Bogenschiessens, 1948). Translated by Inatomi Eijiro and Ueda Takeshi. Tokyo: Kyôdô Shuppan. ———. 1948. Zen in der Kunst des Bogenschiessens (Zen in the Art of Archery). Buenchen-Planegg, Germany: Otto Wilhelm Barth-Verlag.

———. 1953. Zen in the Art of Archery. Translated by Richard F. C. Hull. New York: Pantheon Books. Hobsbawm, Eric, and Terence Ranger, eds. 1983. The Invention of Tradition. New York: Cambridge University Press. Humphreys, Leonard A. 1995. The Way of the Heavenly Sword: The Japanese Army in the 1920’s. Stanford: Stanford University Press. Hurst, G. Cameron, III. 1998. Armed Martial Arts of Japan: Swordsmanship and Archery. New Haven: Yale University Press. Imamura Yoshio. 1967. Jûkyû seiki ni okeru Nihon taiiku no kenkyû (Studies in Nineteenth-Century Japanese Physical Education). Tokyo: Fumaido Shoten. ———, ed. 1982. Nihon budô taikei (Systems of Japanese Martial Art). 10 vols. Kyoto: Dôhôsha. Inoue, Shun. 1998a. “Budô: Invented Tradition in the Martial Arts.” In The Culture of Japan as Seen through Its Leisure. Edited by Sepp Linhart and Sabine Frühstück. Albany: State University of New York Press. ———. 1998b. “The Invention of the Martial Arts: Kanô Jigorô and Kôdôkan Judo.” In Vlastos 1998. Irie Katsumi. 1986. Nihon fashizumu-ka no taiiku shisô (Japanese Fascism and Physical Education Theories). Tokyo: Fumaidô. Irie Kôhei and Sugie Masatoshi, eds. 1988. Nihon budôgaku kenkyû: Watanabe Ichirô kyôju henkan kinen ronshû (Studies in Japanese Martial Arts: Research Commemorating the Retirement of Professor Watanabe Ichirô). Tokyo: Shimazu Shobô. Ishioka Hisao. 1981. Heihôsha no seikatsu (Lifestyles of Swordsmen). Tokyo: Yûsankaku. Jaffe, Richard. 1995. “Neither Monk nor Layman: The Debate over Clerical Marriage in Japanese Buddhism.” Ph.D. dissertation, Yale University. James, William. 1912 (1904). “A World of Pure Experience.” Reprinted in Essays in Radical Empiricism. New York: Longmans, Green, and Co. Kanô Jigorô. 1889. Jûdô ippan narabi ni sono kyôikujô no kachi (An Overview of Judo and its Educational Value). Reprinted in Watanabe 1979. Kawai Masaharu. 1963 (1958). “Chûsei bushidan no ujigami ujidera” (Clan Gods and Clan Temples of Medieval Warrior Bands). Reprinted in Chiiki shakai to shûkyô no shiteki kenkyû. Edited by Ogura Toyofumi. Tokyo: Yanagihara Shoten. Kennedy, Malcolm Duncan. 1924. The Military Side of Japanese Life. London: Constable. Ketelaar, James E. 1993. Of Heretics and Martyrs in Meiji Japan: Buddhism and Its Persecution. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Kuroki Toshihiro. 1967. “Budô ryûha no seiritsu to shugendô” (Development of Martial Art Lineages and Mountain Asceticism). Saga daigaku kyôiku gakubu kenkyû ronbunshû (Memoirs of the Saga University School of Education) 15: 159–193. Leonard, Fred Eugene, and George B. Affleck. 1947. A Guide to the History of Physical Education. 3d ed. Philadelphia: Lea and Febiger. Leuba, James H. 1912. A Psychological Study of Religion. New York: Macmillan. Malefijt, Annemarie de Waal. 1968. Religion and Culture: An Introduction to Anthropology of Religion. New York: Macmillan. Mangan, J. A. 1992. “Britain’s Chief Spiritual Export: Imperial Sport as Moral Metaphor, Political Symbol and Cultural Bond.” In The Religion and Spiritual Development: Japan 499

498 Religion and Spiritual Development: Japan<br />

———. 1988. “Sumô and Popular Culture: <strong>The</strong> Tokugawa Period.” In <strong>The</strong><br />

Japanese Trajectory: Modernization and Beyond. Edited by Gavan<br />

McCormack and Yoshio Sugimoto. New York: Cambridge University<br />

Press.<br />

Collcutt, Martin. 1986. “Buddhism: <strong>The</strong> Threat of Eradication.” In Japan in<br />

Transition: From Tokugawa to Meiji. Edited by Marius Jansen and<br />

Gilbert Rozman. Princeton: Princeton University Press.<br />

Dobbins, James C., ed. 1996. “<strong>The</strong> Legacy of Kuroda Toshio.” Special Issue<br />

of Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 23, nos. 3–4.<br />

Draeger, Donn F. 1973–1974. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> and Ways of Japan. 3 vols.<br />

New York: Weatherhill.<br />

———. 1977. “<strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>: Definitions and Approaches, an Introduction to<br />

the Concept of Combative Culture.” In Play: Anthropological<br />

Perspectives. Edited by Michael A. Salter. Proceedings of the Association<br />

for the Anthropological Study of Play. West Point, NY: Leisure Press.<br />

Draeger, Donn F., and Robert W. Smith. 1969. Asian Fighting <strong>Arts</strong>. Tokyo:<br />

Kodansha International.<br />

Emoto Shôji. 1988. “Bakumatsu kendô ni okeru nijûteki seikaku no keisei<br />

katei” (<strong>The</strong> formation of a split personality in fencing at the end of the<br />

Tokugawa period). In Irie and Sugie 1988.<br />

Endô Yoshinobu. 1994. Kindai Nihon guntai kyôiku shi kenkyû<br />

(History of Military Education in Early Modern Japan). Tokyo: Aoki<br />

Shoten.<br />

Fridell, Wilbur M. 1973. Japanese Shrine Mergers, 1902–12: State Shinto<br />

Moves to the Grassroots. Tokyo: Sophia University Press.<br />

Goodger, John. 1982. “Judo Players as a Gnostic Sect.” Religion 12.<br />

Grapard, Allan G. 1984. “Japan’s Ignored Cultural Revolution: <strong>The</strong><br />

Separation of Shinto and Buddhist Divinities in Meiji (Shimbutsu Bunri)<br />

and a Case Study (Tônomine).” History of Religions 23, no. 3: 240–265.<br />

Guttmann, Allen. 1978. From Ritual to Record: <strong>The</strong> Nature of Modern<br />

Sports. New York: Columbia University Press.<br />

———. 1994. Games and Empires: Modern Sports and Cultural Imperialism.<br />

New York: Columbia University Press.<br />

———. 1992. <strong>The</strong> Olympics: A History of the Modern Games. Urbana:<br />

University of Illinois Press.<br />

Hanai Hitoshi. 1994. Kokusaijin Nitobe Inazô: bushidô to kirisutokyô<br />

(Nitobe Inazo as an Internationalist: Bushidô and Christianity). Chiba<br />

Prefecture: Hiroike Gakuen.<br />

Hayakawa Junzôrô et al., eds. 1915. Bujutsu sôsho (<strong>Martial</strong> Art Treatises).<br />

Tokyo: Kokusho Kankôkai.<br />

Hayashi Takatoshi. 1982. “Dainippon Butokukai no seikaku to tokuchô ni<br />

tsuite” (Characteristics and Features of the Greater Japan <strong>Martial</strong> Virtue<br />

Association). In Taiiku supôtsu shakaigaku kenkyû. Vol. 1. Tokyo: Dôwa<br />

Shôin.<br />

Herrigel, Eugen. 1936. “Die ritterliche Kunst des Bogenschiessens” (<strong>The</strong><br />

Chivalrous Art of Archery). Nippon, Zeitschrift für Japanologie (Nippon:<br />

Journal for Japanese Studies) 2, no. 4: 193–212.<br />

———. 1956. Yumi to Zen (Bow and Zen; originally Zen in der Kunst des<br />

Bogenschiessens, 1948). Translated by Inatomi Eijiro and Ueda Takeshi.<br />

Tokyo: Kyôdô Shuppan.<br />

———. 1948. Zen in der Kunst des Bogenschiessens (Zen in the Art of<br />

Archery). Buenchen-Planegg, Germany: Otto Wilhelm Barth-Verlag.

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