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CONTENTS
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix
- ABBREVIATIONS xi
- Introduction 1
-
HERMENEUTICS AND JAPAN
- 1. Method, Hermeneutics, Truth 9
- 2. Poetics of Intransitivity 17
- 3. The Hermeneutic Approach to Japanese Modernity: “Art-Way,” “Iki,” and “Cut-Continuance” 25
- 4. Frame and Link: A Philosophy of Japanese Composition 36
- 5. The Eloquent Stillness of Stone: Rock in the Dry Landscape Garden 44
- 6. Motoori Norinaga’s Hermeneutic of Mono no Aware: The Link between Ideal and Tradition 60
- 7. Between Individual and Communal, Subject and Object, Self and Other: Mediating Watsuji Tetsurō’s Hermeneutics 76
-
JAPAN’S AESTHETIC HERMENEUTICS
- 8. Nishi Amane on Aesthetics: A Japanese Version of Utilitarian Aesthetics 89
- 9. Hegel in Tokyo: Ernest Fenollosa and His 1882 Lecture on the Truth of Art 97
- 10. Ōgai, Schelling, and Aesthetics 109
- 11. Cognitive Gaps in the Recognition of Masters and Masterpieces in the Formative Years of Japanese Art History, 1880–1900: Historiography in Conflict 115
- 12. Nature—the Naturalization of Experience as National 127
- 13. Coincidentia Oppositorum:Ōnishi Yoshinori’s Greek Genealogies of Japan 142
- 14. Representations of “Japaneseness” in Modern Japanese Aesthetics: An Introduction to the Critique of Comparative Reason 153
-
JAPAN’S LITERARY HERMENEUTICS
- 15. Constructing “Japanese Literature”: Global and Ethnic Nationalism 165
- 16. What Is Bungaku? The Reformulation of the Concept of “Literature” in Early Twentieth-Century Japan 176
- 17. Primitive Vision: Heidegger’s Hermeneutics and Man’yōshū 189
- 18. Saitō Mokichi’s Poetics of Shasei 206
- NOTES 215
- CONTRIBUTORS 241
- INDEX 245
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix
- ABBREVIATIONS xi
- Introduction 1
-
HERMENEUTICS AND JAPAN
- 1. Method, Hermeneutics, Truth 9
- 2. Poetics of Intransitivity 17
- 3. The Hermeneutic Approach to Japanese Modernity: “Art-Way,” “Iki,” and “Cut-Continuance” 25
- 4. Frame and Link: A Philosophy of Japanese Composition 36
- 5. The Eloquent Stillness of Stone: Rock in the Dry Landscape Garden 44
- 6. Motoori Norinaga’s Hermeneutic of Mono no Aware: The Link between Ideal and Tradition 60
- 7. Between Individual and Communal, Subject and Object, Self and Other: Mediating Watsuji Tetsurō’s Hermeneutics 76
-
JAPAN’S AESTHETIC HERMENEUTICS
- 8. Nishi Amane on Aesthetics: A Japanese Version of Utilitarian Aesthetics 89
- 9. Hegel in Tokyo: Ernest Fenollosa and His 1882 Lecture on the Truth of Art 97
- 10. Ōgai, Schelling, and Aesthetics 109
- 11. Cognitive Gaps in the Recognition of Masters and Masterpieces in the Formative Years of Japanese Art History, 1880–1900: Historiography in Conflict 115
- 12. Nature—the Naturalization of Experience as National 127
- 13. Coincidentia Oppositorum:Ōnishi Yoshinori’s Greek Genealogies of Japan 142
- 14. Representations of “Japaneseness” in Modern Japanese Aesthetics: An Introduction to the Critique of Comparative Reason 153
-
JAPAN’S LITERARY HERMENEUTICS
- 15. Constructing “Japanese Literature”: Global and Ethnic Nationalism 165
- 16. What Is Bungaku? The Reformulation of the Concept of “Literature” in Early Twentieth-Century Japan 176
- 17. Primitive Vision: Heidegger’s Hermeneutics and Man’yōshū 189
- 18. Saitō Mokichi’s Poetics of Shasei 206
- NOTES 215
- CONTRIBUTORS 241
- INDEX 245