The Idea of the Body in Japanese Culture and its Dismantlement

Bibliographic Information

Published
2004
DOI
  • 10.5432/ijshs.2.8
Publisher
Japan Society of Physical Education, Health and Sport Sciences

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Description

At the heart of a culture lies a certain view of the body, and this view decides which perceptual experiences the culture chooses to value. In trying to achieve those experiences, certain principles for moving and handling the body are established, and these principles then set the standards for the mastery of essential skills that penetrate through all fields of art, creating a rich foundation from which the culture can flourish. The culture of traditional Japan, which disintegrated at the hands of the Meiji Restoration, indeed possessed such a structure. The idea of the body, the shared perceptual experiences, and the principles of movement that existed in traditional Japanese culture were radically different from those that arrived from the West and have been blindly disseminated by the Japanese government ever since the Meiji Restoration.<br>This paper discusses the feeble underpinnings of modern Japan as a culture built upon the destruction of its own traditions, and explores the possibility of giving birth to a new culture by looking into the structure of its lost traditional culture.

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Details 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1390001205286634240
  • NII Article ID
    130000069563
  • DOI
    10.5432/ijshs.2.8
  • ISSN
    18804012
    13481509
  • Text Lang
    en
  • Data Source
    • JaLC
    • Crossref
    • CiNii Articles
  • Abstract License Flag
    Disallowed

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