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Carmen Blacker : Scholar of Japanese Religion, Myth and Folklore: Writings and Reflections / ed. by Hugh Cortazzi.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, [2022]Copyright date: ©2017Description: 1 online resource (478 p.)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9781898823575
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 398.0952092 23
Other classification:
  • online - DeGruyter
Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Introduction: Carmen Blacker – Friend, Scholar and Wife -- Contributors -- List of Contributors -- List of Plates -- PART I: CARMEN BLACKER AS SEEN BY HER FRIENDS -- 1. Carmen Elizabeth Blacker, 1924 –2009: A Biographical Memoir -- 2. Biographical Portrait -- 3. Memories of Carmen Blacker -- 4. Words from HUGH CORTAZZI at Carmen Blacker’s Memorial Meeting -- PART II: SELECTED EXTRACTS FROM CARMEN BLACKER’S DIARIES AND OTHER AUTOBIOGRAPHICALWRITINGS -- Carmen Blacker's Introduction to her Collected writings -- Introductions Carmen Blacker's Diaries -- Extracts from the diaries -- PART III: SELECTED BIOGRAPHICAL PORTRAITS BY CARMEN BLACKER -- 5. Three Great Japanologists: Chamberlain, Aston and Satow -- 6. Marie Stopes -- 7. Arthur Waley -- 8. Minakata Kumagusu -- 9. Yoshio Markino -- 10. Christmas Humphreys -- 11. Cambridge Women -- PART IV: SELECTED ACADEMIC WRITINGS -- 12. The Shinza or God-seat in the Daijosai: Throne, Bed or Incubation Couch? -- 13. Divination and Oracles in Japan -- 14. The Goddess Emerges from her Cave: Fujita Himiko and her Dragon Palace Family -- 15. The Exiled Warrior and the Hidden Village -- 16. Extracts from Legends of Heike Villages: The Fugitive Warrior as Ancestor -- 17. The Language of Birds -- 18. The Angry Ghost in Japan -- PART V: SELECTED CARMEN BLACKER LECTURES -- 19. Remembering Carmen Blacker -- 20. A Glimpse of the Modestly Literate Picnic Lovers of Old Japan -- 21. Tsushima: Japan Viewed from the Margins – Archives, Books, Ginseng -- 22. Amaterasu’s Progress: The Ise Shrines and the Public Sphere of Post-war Japan -- 23. Unofficial and Commoner Worship od Confucius in Tokugawa Japan -- PART VI: A CELEBRATORY ESSAY -- 24. The Search for the Numinous in Wordsworth and Coleridge: Some Hints from The Catalpa Bow -- APPENDIX: Carmen’s Literary Gift. Compiled by PAUL NORBURY -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary: Carmen Blacker was an outstanding scholar of Japanese culture, known internationally for her writings on religion, myth and folklore – her most notable work being The Catalpa Bow: A Study of Shamanistic Practices in Japan. Importantly, a third of the volume comprises significant extracts from the author’s diaries covering a period of more than forty years, together with a plate section drawn from her extensive photographic archive, thus providing a rare opportunity to gain a personal insight into the author’s life and work. The volume includes a wide selection of writings from distinguished scholars such as Donald Keene and her former pupil Peter Kornicki in celebration of her work and legacy, together with various essays and papers by Carmen Blacker herself that have hitherto not been widely available. In addition to her scholarship, Carmen Blacker was also highly regarded for her work in promoting Japanese Studies at Cambridge and played a vital role in helping to re-establish The Japan Society, London, post-war.
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Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - DeGruyter (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (dgr)9781898823575

Frontmatter -- Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Introduction: Carmen Blacker – Friend, Scholar and Wife -- Contributors -- List of Contributors -- List of Plates -- PART I: CARMEN BLACKER AS SEEN BY HER FRIENDS -- 1. Carmen Elizabeth Blacker, 1924 –2009: A Biographical Memoir -- 2. Biographical Portrait -- 3. Memories of Carmen Blacker -- 4. Words from HUGH CORTAZZI at Carmen Blacker’s Memorial Meeting -- PART II: SELECTED EXTRACTS FROM CARMEN BLACKER’S DIARIES AND OTHER AUTOBIOGRAPHICALWRITINGS -- Carmen Blacker's Introduction to her Collected writings -- Introductions Carmen Blacker's Diaries -- Extracts from the diaries -- PART III: SELECTED BIOGRAPHICAL PORTRAITS BY CARMEN BLACKER -- 5. Three Great Japanologists: Chamberlain, Aston and Satow -- 6. Marie Stopes -- 7. Arthur Waley -- 8. Minakata Kumagusu -- 9. Yoshio Markino -- 10. Christmas Humphreys -- 11. Cambridge Women -- PART IV: SELECTED ACADEMIC WRITINGS -- 12. The Shinza or God-seat in the Daijosai: Throne, Bed or Incubation Couch? -- 13. Divination and Oracles in Japan -- 14. The Goddess Emerges from her Cave: Fujita Himiko and her Dragon Palace Family -- 15. The Exiled Warrior and the Hidden Village -- 16. Extracts from Legends of Heike Villages: The Fugitive Warrior as Ancestor -- 17. The Language of Birds -- 18. The Angry Ghost in Japan -- PART V: SELECTED CARMEN BLACKER LECTURES -- 19. Remembering Carmen Blacker -- 20. A Glimpse of the Modestly Literate Picnic Lovers of Old Japan -- 21. Tsushima: Japan Viewed from the Margins – Archives, Books, Ginseng -- 22. Amaterasu’s Progress: The Ise Shrines and the Public Sphere of Post-war Japan -- 23. Unofficial and Commoner Worship od Confucius in Tokugawa Japan -- PART VI: A CELEBRATORY ESSAY -- 24. The Search for the Numinous in Wordsworth and Coleridge: Some Hints from The Catalpa Bow -- APPENDIX: Carmen’s Literary Gift. Compiled by PAUL NORBURY -- Bibliography -- Index

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http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec

Carmen Blacker was an outstanding scholar of Japanese culture, known internationally for her writings on religion, myth and folklore – her most notable work being The Catalpa Bow: A Study of Shamanistic Practices in Japan. Importantly, a third of the volume comprises significant extracts from the author’s diaries covering a period of more than forty years, together with a plate section drawn from her extensive photographic archive, thus providing a rare opportunity to gain a personal insight into the author’s life and work. The volume includes a wide selection of writings from distinguished scholars such as Donald Keene and her former pupil Peter Kornicki in celebration of her work and legacy, together with various essays and papers by Carmen Blacker herself that have hitherto not been widely available. In addition to her scholarship, Carmen Blacker was also highly regarded for her work in promoting Japanese Studies at Cambridge and played a vital role in helping to re-establish The Japan Society, London, post-war.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.

In English.

Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 29. Jun 2022)