【日本における従弟制度の多様性】
Learning in Likely Places (Learning in Doing: Social, Cognitive, and Computational Perspectives)
著者紹介
内容
目次
List of contributors; Series foreword; Preface; Introduction: situatedlearning in Japan: our educational analysis John Singleton; Part I. Actors,Artists and Calligraphers: Learning in the Traditional Arts: 1. Transmittingtradition by the rules: an anthropological interpretation of the iemotosystem Robert J. Smith; 2. The search for mastery never ceases: Zeami'sclassic treatises on transmitting the traditions of the no theatre J. ThomasRimer; 3. Education in the Kano school in nineteenth-century Japan: questionsabout the copybook method Brenda G. Jordan; 4. Seven characteristics of atraditional Japanese approach to learning Gary DeCoker; 5. Why was everyonelaughing at me? Roles of passage for the kyogen child Jonah Salz; Part II.Potters, Weavers, Mechanics, Doctors and Violinists: Learning in ArtisanalApprenticeship: 6. Learning to be an apprentice Bill Haase; 7. Craft and arteducation in Mashiko pottery workshops John Singleton; 8. Craft andregulatory learning in a neighborhood garage Kathryn Ellen Madono; 9.Developing character in music teachers: a Suzuki approach Sarah Hersh andLois Peak; 10. Becoming a master physician Susan O. Long; 11. Weaving thefuture from the heart of tradition: learning in leisure activities MillieCreighton; Part III. Work and Community Socialization: Diversity in LearningArrangements: 12. Moneyed knowledge: how women become commercial shellfishdivers Jacquetta F. Hill and David W. Plath; 13. The self-taught bureaucrat:Takahashi Koreikiyo and economic policy during the Great Depression RichardJ. Smethurst; 14. Learning at the public bathhouse Scott Clark; 15. Growingup through matsuri: children's establishment of self and community identitiesin festival participation Saburo Morita; Part IV. Appropriations of CulturalPractice: 16. Learning to swing: Oh Sadaharu and the pedagogy and practice ofJapanese baseball William W. Kelly; 17. Good old boy into alcoholic:Danshukai and learning a new drinking role in Japan Stephen R. Smith; 18. Didan ox wander by here recently?: Learning Americanized Zen Maureen W. McClure;19. Learning to be learners: Americans working for a Japanese boss JillKleinberg; Epilogue: Calluses: when culture gets under your skin David W.Plath; Selected glossary; General bibliography; Index.
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