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  1.  26
    An Investigation of Japan's Relationship to Nature and Environment.W. Puck Brecher - 2000
    This reference introduces the significance of the natural environment in Japan's ancient culture, in its modern society, and in its future political agendas. It covers nature as a formative phenomenon in Japanese history, religion, philosophy and art; the modern history of Japan's enviromental problems and its successes and failures with dealing with them; the state of Japan's natural enviroment today, how it has been transformed and how this transformation reflects the cultural nexus; the country's grassroots enviromental movements and their sociopolitical (...)
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  2.  16
    Bashō and the dao: The zhuangzi and the transformation of haikai (review).W. Puck Brecher - 2008 - Philosophy East and West 58 (4):pp. 605-608.
  3.  31
    Useless Losers: Marginality and Modernization in Early Meiji Japan.W. Puck Brecher - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (6):803-817.
    Nation-building initiatives during Japan's Meiji period (1868?1912) erected a rigid normalcy that galvanized a culture of exclusionism. They afforded broader spheres of social activity but a narrower range of acceptable behaviors, greater opportunities for individual empowerment but less tolerance for individuality itself. Backward-looking artists and writers were particularly susceptible to these developments, many earning repute as ?useless losers,? heretics, or traitors. This article speaks to the dynamics between modernity and marginalization through an analysis of the exclusionism that accompanied Japan's modernization (...)
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