Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
University of Hawai'i Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Contributors
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents VII
- Acknowledgments X
- Introduction XI
-
Part One: Moral Values and Sentiments
- 1. Human Nature in the Japanese Myths 3
- 2. The Monkey Memorial Service of Japanese Primatologists 29
- 3. A Culture of Love and Hate 33
- 4. Compensative Justice and Moral Investment among Japanese, Chinese, and Koreans 43
- 5. Individual, Group and Seishin: Japan's Interned Cultural Debate 62
- 6. The Relation of Guilt toward Parents to Achievement and Arranged Marriage among the Japanese 80
-
Part Two: Interaction, Communication, and Grouping
- 7. An Ethnography of Dinner Entertainment in Japan 108
- 8. Amae: A Key Concept for Understanding Japanese Personality Structure 121
- 9. "Male Chauvinism" as a Manifestation of Love in Marriage 130
- 10. Language and Behavior in Japan: The Conceptualization of Personal Relations 142
- 11. Gift-Giving in a Modernizing Japan 158
- 12. Criteria of Group Formation 171
- 13. Skiing Cross-Culturally 188
-
Part Three: Development and Socialization
- 14. Maternal Care and Infant Behavior in Japan and America 201
- 15. Who Sleeps by Whom? Parent-Child Involvement in Urban Japanese Families 247
- 16. Ethics and Moral Precepts Taught in Schools of Japan and the United States 280
- 17. Violence in the Home: Conflict between Two Principles— Maternal and Paternal 297
- 18. "Spirituell Education" in aJapanese Bank 307
-
Part Four: Cultural Stress, Psychotherapies, and Resocialization
- 19. Nonmedical Healing in Contemporary Japan: A Psychiatric Study 344
- 20. Self-Reconstruction in Japanese Religious Psychotherapy 354
- 21. Japanese Attitudes toward Mental Health and Mental Health Care 369
- 22. Fear of Eye-to-Eye Confrontation among Neurotic Patients in Japan 379
- 23. Naikan Therapy 388
- References 399
- Contributors 419
- Index 421
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents VII
- Acknowledgments X
- Introduction XI
-
Part One: Moral Values and Sentiments
- 1. Human Nature in the Japanese Myths 3
- 2. The Monkey Memorial Service of Japanese Primatologists 29
- 3. A Culture of Love and Hate 33
- 4. Compensative Justice and Moral Investment among Japanese, Chinese, and Koreans 43
- 5. Individual, Group and Seishin: Japan's Interned Cultural Debate 62
- 6. The Relation of Guilt toward Parents to Achievement and Arranged Marriage among the Japanese 80
-
Part Two: Interaction, Communication, and Grouping
- 7. An Ethnography of Dinner Entertainment in Japan 108
- 8. Amae: A Key Concept for Understanding Japanese Personality Structure 121
- 9. "Male Chauvinism" as a Manifestation of Love in Marriage 130
- 10. Language and Behavior in Japan: The Conceptualization of Personal Relations 142
- 11. Gift-Giving in a Modernizing Japan 158
- 12. Criteria of Group Formation 171
- 13. Skiing Cross-Culturally 188
-
Part Three: Development and Socialization
- 14. Maternal Care and Infant Behavior in Japan and America 201
- 15. Who Sleeps by Whom? Parent-Child Involvement in Urban Japanese Families 247
- 16. Ethics and Moral Precepts Taught in Schools of Japan and the United States 280
- 17. Violence in the Home: Conflict between Two Principles— Maternal and Paternal 297
- 18. "Spirituell Education" in aJapanese Bank 307
-
Part Four: Cultural Stress, Psychotherapies, and Resocialization
- 19. Nonmedical Healing in Contemporary Japan: A Psychiatric Study 344
- 20. Self-Reconstruction in Japanese Religious Psychotherapy 354
- 21. Japanese Attitudes toward Mental Health and Mental Health Care 369
- 22. Fear of Eye-to-Eye Confrontation among Neurotic Patients in Japan 379
- 23. Naikan Therapy 388
- References 399
- Contributors 419
- Index 421