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词条 John Breen (scholar)
释义

  1. Early life

  2. Career

  3. Selected works

  4. Notes

  5. References

John Lawrence Breen (born 3 March 1956)[1] is a British academic and Japanologist. He is a specialist in Japanese history at the {{nihongo|International Research Center for Japanese Studies|国際日本文化研究センター|Nichibunken}} in Kyoto. He writes in English and Japanese on the history of Shinto and the imperial institution.

Early life

Breen was awarded his BA at the University of Cambridge in 1979. He earned a Ph.D. in 1993 at Cambridge.

Career

From 1985 through 2008, Breen was a Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Reader in Japanese at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. He is currently Professor at the International Research Centre for Japanese Studies.[2] He is also Editor-in-Chief of the peer-reviewed journal Japan Review.[3]

Breen's critical examination of religious practices in Japan has been informed by his historical research. Historicity is construed as a fundamental component of Breen's view of Shinto.[4]

Breen's work on Shinto is influenced by the writings of Toshio Kuroda.[4] As most contemporary historians, he holds a more moderate position. While Kuroda denied Shinto was more than a japanized version of Buddhism, Breen and Teeuwen argue there was a pre-modern, indigenous tradition of worship, mythology and shrines, even if indeed Shinto as an organized religion was yet to be born.[5]

Breen has also written articles in English and Japanese and a book in Japanese on the transformation of the imperial institution in the 19th century.

Selected works

In a statistical overview derived from writings by and about John Breen, OCLC/WorldCat encompasses roughly 10+ works in 30 publications in 1 language and 1,000+ library holding.[6]

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Books

  • Japanese simplified (1987)
  • Japan and Christianity: Impacts and Responses (1996) (edited with Mark Williams)
  • Japanese in Three Months (1997)
  • Shinto in History: Ways of the kami (2000) (edited with Mark Teeuwen)
  • Inoue Nobutaka et al., Shintō: a short history (2002) (co-translated and adapted with Mark Teeuwen)
  • Yasukuni, the War Dead and the Struggle for Japan's Past (2008) (edited)
  • A New History of Shinto (2010) (co-authored with Mark Teeuwen)
  • "Girei to kenryoku: tennno no Meiji ishin" (2010)
Book chapters (recent chapters in English only)
  • “Popes, bishops, and war criminals: reflections on Catholics and Yasukuni in post-war Japan,” in Michael Bathgate ed., Course Reader 10: “Religion in modern Asia: Tradition, state and society,” The Asia Pacific Journal; Japan Focus
  • “The nation’s shrine: conflict and commemoration at Yasukuni, modern Japan’s shrine to the war dead,” in Tsang, Rachel and Eric Taylor Woods eds. The cultural politics of nationalism and nation-building: ritual and performance in the forging of nations" (2014)
  • “Yasukuni shrine: ritual and memory,” in Sven Saaler & Justin Aukema eds., Course Reader 7: “The Politics of Memory in Japan and East Asia,” The Asia Pacific Journal; Japan Focus (2013)
  • “’Fine words indeed’: Yasukuni and the narrative fetishism of war,” Inken Prohl and John Nelson eds., Handbook of contemporary Japanese religions (2012)
  • “Shinto,” in Helmut Anheier, Mark Jurgensmeyer ed., Encyclopedia of Global Studies (2012)
  • “Voices of rage: six paths to the problem of Yasukuni,” in Roy Starrs ed., Politics and religion in modern Japan: red sun, white lotus (2012)
  • “Mourning and violence in the Land of Peace: Reflections on Yasukuni,” in Breen and Yamada eds. Understanding contemporary Japan (2011)
Articles (recent articles in English only)
  • “Resurrecting the sacred land of Japan: the state of Shinto in the 21st century,” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 37, 2 (2010)
  • “’Shinto is the great way of the universe’: historical notes on Shinto-Christian negotiations,” Japan Mission Journal, 63, 4 (2009)
  • “’The danger is ever present’: Catholic critiques of Yasukuni shrine in post-war Japan,’ Japan Mission Journal, 63, 2 (2009)

Notes

1. ^Library of Congress authority file, John Breen, n2002-55791
2. ^International Research Centre for Japanese Studies, faculty CV
3. ^H-Net: Japan Review, Vol. 22
4. ^Rambelli, Fabio. "Dismantling stereotypes surrounding Japan's sacred entities," Japan Times. July 15, 2001
5. ^{{cite he was known as a very nice man to do thatweb|last=Lande|first=Aasuv|title=Japanese Journal of Religious Studies|url=http://nirc.nanzan-u.ac.jp/publications/jjrs/pdf/856.pdf|publisher=Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture|accessdate=4 February 2011}}
6. ^WorldCat Identities {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101230150412/http://www.oclc.org/research/activities/identities/default.htm |date=2010-12-30 }}: Breen, John 1956-

References

  • Rambelli, Fabio. "Dismantling stereotypes surrounding Japan's sacred entities," Japan Times. July 15, 2001; book review excerpted from Monumenta Nipponica, 56:2.
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4 : Historians of Japan|British Japanologists|Living people|1956 births

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