Kindle 端末は必要ありません。無料 Kindle アプリのいずれかをダウンロードすると、スマートフォン、タブレットPCで Kindle 本をお読みいただけます。

  • Apple
  • Android
  • Windows Phone
  • Android

無料アプリを入手するには、Eメールアドレスを入力してください。

Kindle 価格: ¥ 1,999

これらのプロモーションはこの商品に適用されます:

Kindle または他の端末に配信

Kindle または他の端末に配信

[Arudou, Debito]のJAPANESE ONLY: The Otaru Hot Springs Case and Racial Discrimination in Japan (English Edition)
Kindle App Ad

JAPANESE ONLY: The Otaru Hot Springs Case and Racial Discrimination in Japan (English Edition) Kindle版


その他()の形式およびエディションを表示する 他のフォーマットおよびエディションを非表示にする
Amazon 価格
新品 中古品
Kindle版
"もう一度試してください。"
¥ 1,999

紙の本の長さ: 440ページ Word Wise: 有効 タイプセッティングの改善: 有効
Page Flip: 有効 言語: 英語
【買取サービス】 Amazonアカウントを使用して簡単お申し込み。売りたいと思った時に、宅配買取もしくは出張買取を選択してご利用いただけます。 今すぐチェック。



登録情報

  • フォーマット: Kindle版
  • ファイルサイズ: 2639 KB
  • 紙の本の長さ: 440 ページ
  • 販売: Amazon Services International, Inc.
  • 言語: 英語
  • ASIN: B00C8UB6U8
  • Text-to-Speech(テキスト読み上げ機能): 有効
  • X-Ray:
  • Word Wise: 有効
  • おすすめ度: この商品の最初のレビューを書き込んでください。
  • Amazon 売れ筋ランキング:
  • さらに安い価格について知らせる
    この商品を出品する場合、出品者サポートを通じて更新を提案したいですか?

カスタマーレビュー

Amazon.co.jp にはまだカスタマーレビューはありません
星5つ
星4つ
星3つ
星2つ
星1つ

Amazon.com で最も参考になったカスタマーレビュー (beta)

Amazon.com: 5つ星のうち 4.5 2 件のカスタマーレビュー
2 人中、2人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
5つ星のうち 5.0 An important book that belongs in the curriculum of courses on civil rights 2013/5/6
投稿者 Don MacLaren - (Amazon.com)
形式: Kindle版 Amazonで購入
Debito Arudou's tenth anniversary edition of "Japanese Only" is a book that belongs in the curriculum of courses on civil rights. Though Japanese racial discrimination is not as well known as the history of racism in the US or Europe, it is just as prevalent - if not more so.

In this updated version of his book, Arudou tells the story of a lawsuit he and some friends engineered against hot springs in Otaru, Hokkaido that refused entry to foreigners and the "foreign-looking." He meticulously documents court transcripts, emails, conversations and news stories. Though it is a disturbing story, I believe it is uplifting in the end - because we see that someone has the courage, tenacity and intelligence to take on injustice and make a mark, even though he doesn't completely win in the courts. (His case against the city of Otaru, Hokkaido went all the way to the Supreme Court of Japan.)

We see the many difficulties he dealt with in his pursuit of justice, such as infighting among those of his activist group, hate mail and even one letter to him that states, "WE WILL KILL YOUR KIDS." These are things that would have made many give up the fight. Arudou, however, seems to have been mentally prepared for all this, and prevails in the end, I think, by simply telling his story.

That being said, Japan still has a long way to go before it truly embraces the foreigners and the foreign-looking (Arudou is a naturalized Japanese citizen, but a Caucasian), and he articulates this sad state of affairs within a new conclusion at the end of the book.

I salute Arudou for writing this important work and for paving the way for those who wish to partake of the good things Japan has to offer, including the Japanese custom of bathing in hot springs. I believe you will see that we owe him a debt of gratitude for his activism after you have finished the 2013 edition of "Japanese Only."

Don MacLaren
7 人中、6人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
5つ星のうち 4.0 Important tale in shaky format 2010/8/2
投稿者 Count Zero - (Amazon.com)
形式: ペーパーバック
Debito Arudo, a naturalized Japanese hailing originally from The States, is a well-known civil rights activist in Japan. In 2002 he decided to sue a hot spring business for refusing him entry on the basis of his appearance, and the city of Otaru for failing to pass laws that would make such practices illegal. The story is an intriguing one, tied to a wider discourse on Japan's slowly-dawning awareness of its heterogeneous nature, and the nascent call for fair and equal treatment from minority and marginalised groups in Japanese society. Arudo is a vocal and tireless campaigner, somewhat polemical in the style of Michael Moore, who shows vision and sensitivity in the way he raises important issues and keeps them in the public gaze. The tale of the Otaru Hot Springs case is one no foreigner living long-term in Japan can ignore, and should be common knowledge to all Japan-interested commentators worldwide.

While the book is a valuable documenting of the case, the format is regrettably turgid. Arudo seems driven to record all minutiae of the event in print. As such we are subjected to detailed exchanges from online mailing lists, telephone calls related as if verbatim, and newspaper reports providing information read on the previous page but in a different setting. Use of paraphrase, rigid editing, and a third party telling the story in detached narrative would make this tale much more compelling. A personal feud with Tony Laszlo, petty and bizarre as all such feuds are, is presented in mind-numbing detail. It should have been relayed as a paragraph, or one page at most. Quite simply, the 407 pages could be cut to half without losing any of the emotional or social resonance of the tale.

As off-putting as the length and format is, once started the book is fairly easy to skim through without missing out on the facts. The story is interesting enough to overcome the format. Arudo also deserves the recognition and income that your purchase of the book will provide, for his pioneering, indeed brave, stance in an apathetic and often hostile environment.

I have no doubt this tale will be re-told at some point in more attractive prose. For the moment, Japanese Only is the record by default, and therefore should not be missed.
これらのレビューは参考になりましたか? ご意見はクチコミでお聞かせください。
click to open popover

 
フィードバック
カスタマーサービスへのお問合せ・ご相談は、お問い合わせください。
この本の劣悪な品質または書式設定を報告しますか? ここをクリック
このコンテンツを不適切なものとして報告しますか? ここをクリック
このアイテムが著作権に違反していると考えますか? ここをクリック