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826 tulosta hakusanalla Kazuko Shikuma

Splash Zone

Splash Zone

Kazuko Shikuma

Book Vine Press
2023
pokkari
God wants all adults to raise children in their community. God wants children to grow up among people who are following Him. Splash Zone Leader's Guide- helps adults navigate children through Splash Zone, - helps adults lead children who come to small group Bible studies with their parents, - helps adults make the Word of God come alive by sharing their own stories, - helps adults encourage children to read the Word of God. Splash Zone is a curriculum for children in home group Bible studies. The curriculum was developed through experience over fifteen-year span of leading intergenerational small groups. We have the responsibility to raise the next generation.Now with Splash Zone Leader's Guide and Splash Zone, we can raise the next generation "together."
Kazuko and the Gardens of Manzanar

Kazuko and the Gardens of Manzanar

Veda Webb Davis

Gatekeeper Press
2022
sidottu
An historical fiction memoir of a Japanese-American child's experience with her family in the Manzanar internment camp during World War II, as told through her drawings.The Sato family was torn from their pre-war San Jose, California, family life near the beginning of World War II. The Japanese military's attack on the Pearl Harbor Naval Base in 1941 ignites fear of Japanese-American citizens. They are forced to travel to and live in internment camps. Despite the hardships, Kazuko and her family find solace in each other, camp activities, educational opportunities, and even a gardening contest. After the war, the family again must adjust as they return to a changed world.The story highlights the resilience of children in the face of hardship and injustice, and the preservation of human dignity under harsh conditions.
Kazuko and the Gardens of Manzanar

Kazuko and the Gardens of Manzanar

Veda Webb Davis

Gatekeeper Press
2022
pokkari
An historical fiction memoir of a Japanese-American child's experience with her family in the Manzanar internment camp during World War II, as told through her drawings.The Sato family was torn from their pre-war San Jose, California, family life near the beginning of World War II. The Japanese military's attack on the Pearl Harbor Naval Base in 1941 ignites fear of Japanese-American citizens. They are forced to travel to and live in internment camps. Despite the hardships, Kazuko and her family find solace in each other, camp activities, educational opportunities, and even a gardening contest. After the war, the family again must adjust as they return to a changed world.The story highlights the resilience of children in the face of hardship and injustice, and the preservation of human dignity under harsh conditions.
Kazuko Miyamoto
Edited by Luca Cerizza, Zasha Colah and Eva Fabbris, this monograph is the most comprehensive published so far on the Japanese artist Kazuko Miyamoto (b. 1942) who has lived in New York City for many years. From her initial Post-Minimalist phase to her rediscovery of natural materials and craft practices, from her interest in performance also in public contexts, to the revival of traditional Japanese stylistic features in her later years, this volume investigates the eclectic and free nature of Miyamoto’s work and life and her relations with the New York City artistic and cultural scene from the late 1960s to the present. The volume complements two monographic exhibitions at the Madre museum in Naples (2023) and Belvedere 21 in Vienna (2024), both curated by Eva Fabbris, contributing to the rediscovery and study of a unique voice on the contemporary art scene. Text in English and Italian.
Frank Okada

Frank Okada

Kazuko Nakane

University of Washington Press
2005
pokkari
Artist Frank Okada played a significant role in the modern art history of the Pacific Northwest. Born a Nisei in 1931, he was raised in Seattle's International District and throughout his life retained its influences and his vivid memories in his art. From his first painting award -- received at the Washington State fair -- until his death in 2000, he worked at the confluence of regional art, Asian culture, and national art movements.At the beginning of his career, Okada received a series of prominent fellowships -- John Hay Whitney in 1957, Fulbright in 1959, and Guggenheim in 1966–67. He was greatly influenced by the artists he met and was a close observer of the art scenes in New York, Paris, and Kyoto in an effort to find his own style of painting. He began teaching painting at the University of Oregon in 1969, a tenure that lasted almost thirty years. His work from the seventies, eighties, and nineties balanced forms and colors in intensely worked surfaces. The color blocks gradually became more intellectually structured and his compositions more expressive as he made his colors more powerful. As Nakane notes, "without recognizable reference to nature or his own personality, he created a texture that brought light to a field of color. . . . In order to appreciate his paintings, one needs to spend time observing how the colors respond to the changes of light throughout the day."
Social Change and the Individual

Social Change and the Individual

Kazuko Tsurumi

Princeton University Press
2015
pokkari
A distinguished Japanese scholar counterbalances the current preoccupation among sociologists with childhood socialization by exploring the changes in values and attitudes among adults in Japan before and after World War II. Originally published in 1970. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Social Change and the Individual

Social Change and the Individual

Kazuko Tsurumi

Princeton University Press
2016
sidottu
A distinguished Japanese scholar counterbalances the current preoccupation among sociologists with childhood socialization by exploring the changes in values and attitudes among adults in Japan before and after World War II. Originally published in 1970. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Divided Fates

Divided Fates

Kazuko Suzuki

Lexington Books
2016
sidottu
This book compares the Korean diasporic groups in Japan and the United States. It highlights the contrasting adaptation of Koreans in Japan and the United States, and illuminates how the destinies of immigrants who originally belonged to the same ethnic/national collectivity diverge depending upon destinations and how they are received in a certain state and society within particular historical contexts. The author finds that the mode of incorporation (a specific combination of contextual factors), rather than ethnic ‘culture’ and ‘race,’ plays a decisive role in determining the fates of these Korean immigrant groups. In other words, what matters most for immigrants’ integration is not their particular cultural background or racial similarity to the dominant group, but the way they are received by the host state and other institutions. Thus, this book is not just about Korean immigrants; it is also about how contexts of reception including different conceptualizations of ‘race’ in relation to nationhood affect the adaptation of immigrants from the same ethnic/national origin.
Seasons of Sacred Lust

Seasons of Sacred Lust

Kazuko Shiraishi

New Directions Publishing Corporation
1978
nidottu
Seasons of Sacred Lust is Kazuko Shiraishi’s challenge to the conventions of Japanese erotic poetry. Born in Vancouver, Canada, Shiraishi was taken to Japan by her family just prior to World War II, and her first poetry (written at age seventeen, published at twenty) emerged from the violence and ugliness of postwar Tokyo. Her earliest work, associated with the avant-garde magazine Vou, shows her talent for vivid, bizarre, almost surrealistic imagery. Her later writing, coming out of her deepening involvement in the world of modern jazz and her increasing emphasis on the performance of her poetry, dramatizes a society of estrangement and alienation where music and poetry provide the only values, and sex the only solace, in a disintegrating world. This selection is translated by a group of Japanese and American poets: Iluko Atsumi, John Solt, Carol Tinker, Yasuyo Morita, and Kenneth Rexroth who provided an informative, perceptive introduction.
My Floating Mother, City

My Floating Mother, City

Kazuko Shiraishi

New Directions Publishing Corporation
2009
nidottu
This exciting new collection, My Floating Mother, City, contains poems from Kazuko Shiraishi's most recent books published in Japan, including The Running of the Full Moon (2004) and My Floating Mother, City (2003), which received the Bansui Poetry Award and a Cultural Award from the Emperor of Japan. Also included here are three amazing long sequences including "Sendai Metro, Greece Street," translated into English for the first time.
Sea, Land, Shadow

Sea, Land, Shadow

Kazuko Shiraishi

New Directions Publishing Corporation
2017
nidottu
the people, the boats completely gone with the tsunami / tonight you would not be able to sleep —from Sea, Land, Shadow Sea, Land, Shadow, the fourth collection by Kazuko Shiraishi to be published by New Directions, comprises work written over sixty-years, from 1951 to 2015. Shiraishi, described by Donald Keene as “the outstanding poetic voice of her generation of disengagement in Japan,” sees the world in a grain of rice and finds poetry in a mountain-road traffic jam. In the haunting title poem, she visits Iwanuma not long after the disastrous tsunami hit in 2011 and finds “no houses but a place where houses had been.” This pamphlet also includes a long, lyrical homage to Yukio Mishima, as well as playful and profound meditations on a Roman condom, lizard god, god of war, and an ear.
Fired Earth, Woven Bamboo

Fired Earth, Woven Bamboo

Kazuko Todate

Museum of Fine Arts,Boston
2014
nidottu
The blossoming of contemporary crafts in Japan that began in the twentieth century is rooted in a long and rich tradition of exquisite design and technical accomplishment. Featuring some one hundred works by close to sixty artists, Fired Earth, Woven Bamboo showcases the range of creative approaches in Japanese ceramics and bamboo art beginning in the postwar period and focusing on the past three decades. Some artists choose to break the bounds of vessel shapes to create wildly sculptural forms, whereas others pursue individual expression through more nuanced approaches. All engage in dialogue with their materials as well as with traditional forms, functions, and techniques. The works that spring from their hands - delicate or monumental, humorous or spiritual, rustic or sophisticated - testify to the vitality of the contemporary crafts movement and to the marvelous variety of artistic achievement it has fostered. Enhanced with historical and biographical essays by a leading expert on Japanese crafts, Fired Earth, Woven Bamboo provides a fascinating tour of contemporary ceramic and bamboo arts in Japan as well as an introduction to the riches of the Stanley and Mary Ann Snider Collection at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.