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Shūzō Kuki

Shūzō Kuki (九鬼 周造, Kuki Shūzō, February 15, 1888 – May 6, 1941) was a Japanese art critic, philosopher, and poet.

Shūzō Kuki
Born(1888-02-15)February 15, 1888
DiedMay 6, 1941(1941-05-06) (aged 53)
Nationality Japanese
Notable workThe Structure of Iki
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionJapanese philosophy
SchoolKyoto School
InstitutionsKyoto University
Main interests

Early life edit

Kuki was the fourth child of Baron Kuki Ryūichi (九鬼 隆一) a high bureaucrat in the Meiji Ministry for Culture and Education (Monbushō). Since it appears that Kuki's mother, Hatsu, was already pregnant when she fell in love with Okakura Kakuzō (岡倉 覚三), otherwise known as Okakura Tenshin (岡倉 天心), a protégé of her husband's (a notable patron of the arts), the rumour that Okakura was Kuki's father would appear to be groundless. It is true, however, that Shūzō as a child, after his mother had separated and then divorced his father, thought of Okakura, who often visited, as his real father, and later certainly hailed him as his spiritual father. From Okakura, he gained much of his fascination for aesthetics and perhaps foreign languages, as indeed his fascination with the peculiar cultural codes of the pleasure quarters of Japan owes something to the fact that his mother had once been a geisha.

At age 23 in 1911 (Meiji 44), Kuki converted to Catholicism; and he was baptized in Tokyo as Franciscus Assisiensis Kuki Shūzō. The idealism and introspection implied by this decision were early evidence of issues which would have resonance in the characteristic mindset of the mature man.[1]

A graduate in philosophy of Tokyo Imperial University, Kuki spent eight years in Europe to polish his knowledge of languages and deepen his already significant studies of contemporary Western thought. At the University of Heidelberg, he studied under the neo-Kantian Heinrich Rickert, and he engaged Eugen Herrigel as a tutor.[2] At the University of Paris, he was impressed by the work of Henri Bergson, whom he came to know personally; and he engaged the young Jean-Paul Sartre as a French tutor.[3] It is little known outside Japan that Kuki influenced Jean-Paul Sartre to develop an interest in Heidegger's philosophy.[4]

At the University of Freiburg, Kuki studied phenomenology under Edmund Husserl; and he first met Martin Heidegger in Husserl's home. He moved to the University of Marburg for Heidegger's 1927/1928 winter semester lectures on the phenomenological interpretation of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (published as volume 25 in the Heidegger Gesamtausgabe), and for Heidegger's seminar "Schelling's Essay on the Essence of Human Freedom."[3] The following semester (Summer, 1928) he attended Heidegger's lecture on logic in the light of Leibniz (HGA 26) and his seminar on Aristotle's Physics.[5] Fellow students during these years in Europe were Tetsurō Watsuji and Kiyoshi Miki.

Career edit

Shortly after Kuki's return to Japan, he wrote and published his masterpiece, The Structure of "Iki" (1930). In this work he undertakes to make a phenomenological analysis of iki, a variety of chic culture current among the fashionable set in Edo in the Tokugawa period, and asserted that it constituted one of the essential values of Japanese culture.

Kuki took up a teaching post at Kyoto University, then a prominent center for conservative cultural values and thinking. His early lectures focused on Descartes and Bergson. In the context of a faculty with a primarily Germanic philosophical background, his lectures offered a somewhat different perspective based on the work of French philosophers.

He became an Associate Professor in 1933 (Shōwa 8); and in that same year, he published the first book length study of Martin Heidegger to appear in Japanese.[6] In this context, it is noteworthy that the German philosopher explicitly referenced a conversation "between a Japanese and an inquirer"[7] in On the Way to Language (Aus einem Gespräch von der Sprache).[8] Also, Heidegger expressed a desire to have written the preface to the German translation of The Structure of "Iki".[9]

At the University of Kyoto, Kuki was elevated to Professor of Philosophy in March 1934 (Shōwa 10).[6] The next year, he published The Problem of Contingency, also known as The Problem of the Accidental.[10] This work was developed from his personal experiences in Europe and the influences of Heidegger. As a single Japanese man within an encompassing "white" or non-Japanese society, he considered the extent to which he became a being who lacked necessity.[4] His Kyoto University lectures on Heidegger, Man and Existence, were published in 1939.[11]

From the mid-thirties, while Japan drifted towards totalitarianism and the war in China dragged on, Kuki seemed not to be much disturbed by the growth of fascism.[12]

In 1941, Kuki died prematurely from consequences following an attack of peritonitis.[13] His manuscripts are now kept in the Konan University Library.[14]

Published works edit

Published during Kuki’s lifetime:

  • On Time [Propos sur le temps] (Paris: Philippe Renouard, 1928).
  • The Structure of “Iki” [「いき」の構造] (Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1930).[15]
  • The Problem of Contingency [偶然性の問題] (Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1935).[16]
  • Humanity and Existence [人間と実存] (Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1939).[17]
    A collection of Kuki’s essays on philosophy.

Published posthumously:

  • Literary Theory [文芸論] (Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1941).[18]
    A collection of Kuki’s essays on literature.
  • Occasional Writings [遠里丹婦麗天] (Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1941).
  • Paris of My Mind [巴里心景] (Tokyo: Kôchô Shôrin, 1942).[19]
    A collection of Kuki’s poetry.
  • A Draft History of Modern Western Philosophy [西洋近世哲学史稿] (Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1944).
  • Lectures on Contemporary French Philosophy [現代フランス哲学講義] (Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1957).

Collected works edit

Kuki’s Collected Works [九鬼周造全集], in 12 volumes (often abbreviated KSZ in scholarly publications, for Kuki Shûzô Zenshû), are published by Iwanami Shoten.[20][21]

Vol. 1

  • The Structure of “Iki” [「いき」の構造], KSZ1:1-85.
    • ‘Introduction’ [序説]
    • ‘The Intentional Structure of “Iki”’ [「いき」の内包的構造]
    • ‘The Extensional Structure of “Iki”’ [「いき」の外延的構造]
    • ‘The Natural Expression of “Iki”’ [「いき」の自然的表現]
    • ‘The Artistic Expression of “Iki”’ [「いき」の芸術的表現]
    • ‘Conclusion’ [結論]
  • ‘The Essence of “Iki”’ [「いき」の本質], KSZ1:87-108.
    A draft of The Structure of “Iki”.
  • Paris of My Mind [巴里心景], KSZ1:109-218.
  • ‘The Present State of French and German Philosophy’ [仏独哲学界の現状], KSZ1:221-32.
  • ‘Japanese Culture’ [日本文化], KSZ1:233-37.
  • ‘Faith and Knowledge’ [Glauben und Wissen], KSZ1:298-344 (German original), KSZ1:351-98 (Japanese translation by Satô Akio).
    Kuki's thesis written during his time at Tokyo Imperial University, on the subject of faith and knowledge in European medieval philosophy.
  • On Time [Propos sur le temps], KSZ1:263-94 (French original), KSZ1:399-433 (Japanese translation by Sakamoto Kenzô).
    Contains two lectures that Kuki delivered at Pontigny in August 1928, ‘La notion du temps et la reprise sur le temps en orient’ and ‘L’expression de l’infini dans l’art japonais’.
  • ‘Things Japanese’ [Choses japonaises], KSZ1:239-62 (French original), KSZ1:435-58 (Japanese translation by Sakamoto Kenzô).
    A series of short essays, which the editors surmise were written during Kuki’s stay in Paris, including ‘Bergson au Japon’ and ‘À la manière d’Hérodote’.[22][23]

Vol. 2

  • The Problem of Contingency [偶然性の問題], KSZ2:1-264.
    • ‘Introduction’ [序説]
    • ‘Categorical Contingency’ [定言的偶然]
    • ‘Hypothetical Contingency’ [仮定的偶然]
    • ‘Disjunctive Contingency’ [離接的偶然]
    • ‘Conclusion’ [結論]
  • ‘Contingency’ [偶然性], KSZ2:267-322.
    Kuki’s doctoral dissertation.
  • ‘Contingency’ [偶然性], KSZ2:323-51.
    A lecture by Kuki.
  • ‘The Logic of Becoming Contingent’ [偶然化の論理], KSZ2:353-73.
  • ‘An Enquiry into the Basic Character of Contingency’ [偶然性の基礎的性格の一考察], KSZ2:375-84.

Vol. 3

  • Humanity and Existence [人間と実存], KSZ3:1-292.
    • ‘What Is Anthropology?’ [人間学とは何か]
    • ‘Existentialist Philosophy’ [実存哲学]
    • ‘View of Life’ [人生観]
    • ‘My View of Philosophy’ [哲学私見]
    • ‘Aspects of Contingency’ [偶然の諸相]
    • ‘The Feeling of Surprise and Contingency’ [驚きの情と偶然性]
    • ‘Metaphysical Time’ [形而上学的時間]
    • ‘Heidegger’s Philosophy’ [ハイデッガーの哲学]
    • ‘The Japanese Character’ [日本的性格]
  • ‘The Problem of Time: Bergson and Heidegger’ [時間の問題——ベルクソンとハイデッガー], KSZ3:295-337.
  • ‘The Temporality of Literature’ [文学の時間性], KSZ3:339-65.
  • ‘On the Japanese Character’ [日本的性格について], KSZ3:367-99.
  • ‘Characteristics of French Philosophy’ [フランス哲学の特徴], KSZ3:401-14
  • ‘General Characteristics of French Philosophy’ [Caractères généraux de la philosophie française], KSZ3:415-23.
    French version of the one above.
  • Contributions to the Dictionary of Philosophy [哲学辞典], KSZ3:425-36.
    Entries on ‘Duration’ [持続], ‘Vitalism’ [生の哲学], ‘Life’ [生命] and ‘Creative evolution’ [創造的進化].

Vol. 4

  • Literary Theory [文芸論], KSZ4:1-513.
    • ‘Metaphysics of Literature’ [文学の形而上学], KSZ4:7-59.
    • ‘An Enquiry into Elegance’ [風流に関する一考察], KSZ4:60-82.
    • ‘Fusion of Art and Life’ [芸術と生活の融合], KSZ4:83-169.
    • ‘Genealogy of Emotion’ [情緒の系図], KSZ4:170-222.
    • ‘Rhyme in Japanese Poetry’ [日本詩の押韻], KSZ4:223-513.


Vol. 5: Occasional Writings [をりにふれて] and Theory of Rhyme [押韻論]

Vol. 6: A Draft History of Modern Western Philosophy, Vol. 1 [西洋近世哲学史稿 (上)]

Vol. 7: A Draft History of Modern Western Philosophy, Vol. 2 [西洋近世哲学史稿 (下)]

Vol. 8: Lectures on Contemporary French Philosophy [現代フランス哲学講義]

Vol. 9: Lectures on Contemporary Philosophy [講義 現代哲学] and Seminars on Trends in Contemporary Philosophy [講演 現代哲学の動向]

Vol. 10: Lectures on Heidegger’s Phenomenological Ontology [講義 ハイデッガーの現象学的存在論]

Vol. 11: Introductory Lectures on Literature [講義 文学概論] and Lectures on Contingency [講義 偶然性]

  • The lectures entitled Outline of Literature were delivered by Kuki at the University of Tokyo in 1933.[24] Among them is the lecture Guzen (Contingency) which is translated in Marra, 2011.

Vol. 12: Miscellaneous Documents [資料篇]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Nara, Hiroshi. (2004). The Structure of Detachment: the Aesthetic Vision of Kuki Shūzō with a translation of "Iki no kōzō," pp. 96–97.
  2. ^ Nara, p. 172.
  3. ^ a b Nara, p. 173.
  4. ^ a b Parkes, Graham. (1990). Heidegger and Asian Thought, p. 158.
  5. ^ Marra (2004), p. 9
  6. ^ a b Nara, p. 174.
  7. ^ Zwischen einem Japaner und einem Fragenden
  8. ^ Marra, Michael F. (2002). Japanese hermeneutics, pp. 89–202., p. 202, at Google Books
  9. ^ Light, Stephen. (1987). Kuki Shūzō and Jean-Paul Sartre, p. 31.
  10. ^ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Kuki Shūzō" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 571, p. 571, at Google Books.
  11. ^ Nara, p. 161.
  12. ^ Nara, p. 149.
  13. ^ Nara, p. 175.
  14. ^ Konan University Digital Archive
  15. ^ "「いき」の構造 - 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション".
  16. ^ "偶然性の問題 - 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション".
  17. ^ "人間と実存 九鬼周造 著 33F@69@1".
  18. ^ "文藝論 九鬼周造著 28B@142@1".
  19. ^ "巴里心景 - 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション".
  20. ^ Takada, passim
  21. ^ Nara, p. 9
  22. ^ Takada, p. 288
  23. ^ Pincus, p. 52
  24. ^ Marra, 2011 p. 396

References and further reading edit

Secondary sources edit

  • Botz-Bornstein, Thorsten. "Contingency and the Time of the Dream: Kuki Shuzo and French Prewar Philosophy" in Philosophy East and West 50:4 (2000).
  • ———. "Iki, Style, Trace: Shuzo Kuki and the Spirit of Hermeneutics" in Philosophy East and West 47: 4 (1997): 554–580.
  • Light, Stephen. Kuki Shūzō and Jean-Paul Sartre: Influence and Counter-Influence in the Early History of Existential Phenomenology. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1987.
  • Marra, Michael F. Kuki Shuzo: A Philosopher's Poetry and Poetics. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2004.
  • ——— Japanese Hermeneutics: Current Debates on Aesthetics and Interpretation. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2002.
  • ——— Japan's Frames of Reference: A Hermeneutics Reader. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2011.
  • Mayeda, Graham. "Is there a Method to Chance? Contrasting Kuki Shūzō’s Phenomenological Methodology in the Problem of Contingency with that of His Contemporaries Wilhelm Windelband and Heinrich Rickert." In Frontiers of Japanese Philosophy II: Neglected Themes and Hidden Variations. Edited by Victor S. Hori and Melissa Anne-Marie Curley. Nagoya: Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture, 2008.
  • ———. Japanese Philosophers on Society and Culture: Nishida Kitarō, Watsuji Tetsurō, and Kuki Shūzō. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2020.
  • ———. "Time for Ethics: Temporality and the Ethical Ideal in Emmanuel Levinas and Kuki Shūzō" in Comparative and Continental Philosophy 4: 1 (2012: 105-124.
  • ———. Time, Space and Ethics in the Philosophy of Watsuji Tetsurō, Kuki Shūzō, and Martin Heidegger. New York: Routledge, 2006.
  • Nara, Hiroshi. The Structure of Detachment: the Aesthetic Vision of Kuki Shūzō with a Translation of "Iki no kōzō." Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2004.
  • Parkes, Graham. Heidegger and Asian Thought. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1990.
  • Pincus, Leslie. Authenticating Culture in Imperial Japan: Kuki Shūzō and the Rise of National Aesthetics. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996.
  • Saitō, Takako. ""The Human and the Absolute in the Writings of Kuki Shūzō" (Archive). In Volume 3 of Frontiers of Japanese Philosophy, 58–72. Edited by James W. Heisig and Mayuko Uehara (written as Uehara Mayuko). Nagoya: Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture, 2008.
  • ———."In Search of the Absolute : Kuki Shūzō and Shinran" (Archive). In Volume 7 of Frontiers of Japanese Philosophy, 232–246. Edited by James W. Heisig and Rein Raud. Nagoya: Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture, 2010.
  • Sakabe, Megumi. Washida Seiichi and Fujita Masakatsu, eds. Kuki Shūzō no sekai. Tokyo: Minerva Shobō, 2002.
  • St. Clair, Robert N. "The Phenomenology of Self Across Cultures." In Intercultural Communication Studies 13: 3 (2004): 8–26.
  • Takada, Yasunari. "Shuzo Kuki: or, A Sense of Being In-between" (Archive) In: Takada, Yasunari. Transcendental Descent: Essays in Literature and Philosophy (Collection UTCP-2). The University of Tokyo Center for Philosophy (UTCP). p. 281–295.
  • Yasuda, Takeshi and Michitarō Tada. "Iki" no kōzō’ o yomu. Tokyo: Asahi Sensho, 1979.

External links edit

  • 九鬼 周造 (Kuki Shūzō) at www.aozora.gr.jp (in Japanese)
  • 九鬼周造 (Kuki Shūzō) at www.isis.ne.jp (in Japanese)

shūzō, kuki, this, japanese, name, surname, kuki, 九鬼, 周造, kuki, shūzō, february, 1888, 1941, japanese, critic, philosopher, poet, born, 1888, february, 1888tokyo, prefecture, japandiedmay, 1941, 1941, aged, kyoto, japannationality, japanesenotable, workthe, st. In this Japanese name the surname is Kuki Shuzō Kuki 九鬼 周造 Kuki Shuzō February 15 1888 May 6 1941 was a Japanese art critic philosopher and poet Shuzō KukiBorn 1888 02 15 February 15 1888Tokyo Prefecture JapanDiedMay 6 1941 1941 05 06 aged 53 Kyoto JapanNationality JapaneseNotable workThe Structure of IkiEra20th century philosophyRegionJapanese philosophySchoolKyoto SchoolInstitutionsKyoto UniversityMain interestsAestheticsphilosophy of culturecontingencyexistentialism Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Published works 4 Collected works 5 Notes 6 References and further reading 6 1 Secondary sources 7 External linksEarly life editKuki was the fourth child of Baron Kuki Ryuichi 九鬼 隆一 a high bureaucrat in the Meiji Ministry for Culture and Education Monbushō Since it appears that Kuki s mother Hatsu was already pregnant when she fell in love with Okakura Kakuzō 岡倉 覚三 otherwise known as Okakura Tenshin 岡倉 天心 a protege of her husband s a notable patron of the arts the rumour that Okakura was Kuki s father would appear to be groundless It is true however that Shuzō as a child after his mother had separated and then divorced his father thought of Okakura who often visited as his real father and later certainly hailed him as his spiritual father From Okakura he gained much of his fascination for aesthetics and perhaps foreign languages as indeed his fascination with the peculiar cultural codes of the pleasure quarters of Japan owes something to the fact that his mother had once been a geisha At age 23 in 1911 Meiji 44 Kuki converted to Catholicism and he was baptized in Tokyo as Franciscus Assisiensis Kuki Shuzō The idealism and introspection implied by this decision were early evidence of issues which would have resonance in the characteristic mindset of the mature man 1 A graduate in philosophy of Tokyo Imperial University Kuki spent eight years in Europe to polish his knowledge of languages and deepen his already significant studies of contemporary Western thought At the University of Heidelberg he studied under the neo Kantian Heinrich Rickert and he engaged Eugen Herrigel as a tutor 2 At the University of Paris he was impressed by the work of Henri Bergson whom he came to know personally and he engaged the young Jean Paul Sartre as a French tutor 3 It is little known outside Japan that Kuki influenced Jean Paul Sartre to develop an interest in Heidegger s philosophy 4 At the University of Freiburg Kuki studied phenomenology under Edmund Husserl and he first met Martin Heidegger in Husserl s home He moved to the University of Marburg for Heidegger s 1927 1928 winter semester lectures on the phenomenological interpretation of Kant s Critique of Pure Reason published as volume 25 in the Heidegger Gesamtausgabe and for Heidegger s seminar Schelling s Essay on the Essence of Human Freedom 3 The following semester Summer 1928 he attended Heidegger s lecture on logic in the light of Leibniz HGA 26 and his seminar on Aristotle s Physics 5 Fellow students during these years in Europe were Tetsurō Watsuji and Kiyoshi Miki Career editShortly after Kuki s return to Japan he wrote and published his masterpiece The Structure of Iki 1930 In this work he undertakes to make a phenomenological analysis of iki a variety of chic culture current among the fashionable set in Edo in the Tokugawa period and asserted that it constituted one of the essential values of Japanese culture Kuki took up a teaching post at Kyoto University then a prominent center for conservative cultural values and thinking His early lectures focused on Descartes and Bergson In the context of a faculty with a primarily Germanic philosophical background his lectures offered a somewhat different perspective based on the work of French philosophers He became an Associate Professor in 1933 Shōwa 8 and in that same year he published the first book length study of Martin Heidegger to appear in Japanese 6 In this context it is noteworthy that the German philosopher explicitly referenced a conversation between a Japanese and an inquirer 7 in On the Way to Language Aus einem Gesprach von der Sprache 8 Also Heidegger expressed a desire to have written the preface to the German translation of The Structure of Iki 9 At the University of Kyoto Kuki was elevated to Professor of Philosophy in March 1934 Shōwa 10 6 The next year he published The Problem of Contingency also known as The Problem of the Accidental 10 This work was developed from his personal experiences in Europe and the influences of Heidegger As a single Japanese man within an encompassing white or non Japanese society he considered the extent to which he became a being who lacked necessity 4 His Kyoto University lectures on Heidegger Man and Existence were published in 1939 11 From the mid thirties while Japan drifted towards totalitarianism and the war in China dragged on Kuki seemed not to be much disturbed by the growth of fascism 12 In 1941 Kuki died prematurely from consequences following an attack of peritonitis 13 His manuscripts are now kept in the Konan University Library 14 Published works editPublished during Kuki s lifetime On Time Propos sur le temps Paris Philippe Renouard 1928 The Structure of Iki いき の構造 Tokyo Iwanami Shoten 1930 15 The Problem of Contingency 偶然性の問題 Tokyo Iwanami Shoten 1935 16 Humanity and Existence 人間と実存 Tokyo Iwanami Shoten 1939 17 A collection of Kuki s essays on philosophy Published posthumously Literary Theory 文芸論 Tokyo Iwanami Shoten 1941 18 A collection of Kuki s essays on literature Occasional Writings 遠里丹婦麗天 Tokyo Iwanami Shoten 1941 Paris of My Mind 巴里心景 Tokyo Kocho Shorin 1942 19 A collection of Kuki s poetry A Draft History of Modern Western Philosophy 西洋近世哲学史稿 Tokyo Iwanami Shoten 1944 Lectures on Contemporary French Philosophy 現代フランス哲学講義 Tokyo Iwanami Shoten 1957 Collected works editKuki s Collected Works 九鬼周造全集 in 12 volumes often abbreviated KSZ in scholarly publications for Kuki Shuzo Zenshu are published by Iwanami Shoten 20 21 Vol 1 The Structure of Iki いき の構造 KSZ1 1 85 Introduction 序説 The Intentional Structure of Iki いき の内包的構造 The Extensional Structure of Iki いき の外延的構造 The Natural Expression of Iki いき の自然的表現 The Artistic Expression of Iki いき の芸術的表現 Conclusion 結論 The Essence of Iki いき の本質 KSZ1 87 108 A draft of The Structure of Iki Paris of My Mind 巴里心景 KSZ1 109 218 The Present State of French and German Philosophy 仏独哲学界の現状 KSZ1 221 32 Japanese Culture 日本文化 KSZ1 233 37 Faith and Knowledge Glauben und Wissen KSZ1 298 344 German original KSZ1 351 98 Japanese translation by Sato Akio Kuki s thesis written during his time at Tokyo Imperial University on the subject of faith and knowledge in European medieval philosophy On Time Propos sur le temps KSZ1 263 94 French original KSZ1 399 433 Japanese translation by Sakamoto Kenzo Contains two lectures that Kuki delivered at Pontigny in August 1928 La notion du temps et la reprise sur le temps en orient and L expression de l infini dans l art japonais Things Japanese Choses japonaises KSZ1 239 62 French original KSZ1 435 58 Japanese translation by Sakamoto Kenzo A series of short essays which the editors surmise were written during Kuki s stay in Paris including Bergson au Japon and A la maniere d Herodote 22 23 Vol 2 The Problem of Contingency 偶然性の問題 KSZ2 1 264 Introduction 序説 Categorical Contingency 定言的偶然 Hypothetical Contingency 仮定的偶然 Disjunctive Contingency 離接的偶然 Conclusion 結論 Contingency 偶然性 KSZ2 267 322 Kuki s doctoral dissertation Contingency 偶然性 KSZ2 323 51 A lecture by Kuki The Logic of Becoming Contingent 偶然化の論理 KSZ2 353 73 An Enquiry into the Basic Character of Contingency 偶然性の基礎的性格の一考察 KSZ2 375 84 Vol 3 Humanity and Existence 人間と実存 KSZ3 1 292 What Is Anthropology 人間学とは何か Existentialist Philosophy 実存哲学 View of Life 人生観 My View of Philosophy 哲学私見 Aspects of Contingency 偶然の諸相 The Feeling of Surprise and Contingency 驚きの情と偶然性 Metaphysical Time 形而上学的時間 Heidegger s Philosophy ハイデッガーの哲学 The Japanese Character 日本的性格 The Problem of Time Bergson and Heidegger 時間の問題 ベルクソンとハイデッガー KSZ3 295 337 The Temporality of Literature 文学の時間性 KSZ3 339 65 On the Japanese Character 日本的性格について KSZ3 367 99 Characteristics of French Philosophy フランス哲学の特徴 KSZ3 401 14 General Characteristics of French Philosophy Caracteres generaux de la philosophie francaise KSZ3 415 23 French version of the one above Contributions to the Dictionary of Philosophy 哲学辞典 KSZ3 425 36 Entries on Duration 持続 Vitalism 生の哲学 Life 生命 and Creative evolution 創造的進化 Vol 4 Literary Theory 文芸論 KSZ4 1 513 Metaphysics of Literature 文学の形而上学 KSZ4 7 59 An Enquiry into Elegance 風流に関する一考察 KSZ4 60 82 Fusion of Art and Life 芸術と生活の融合 KSZ4 83 169 Genealogy of Emotion 情緒の系図 KSZ4 170 222 Rhyme in Japanese Poetry 日本詩の押韻 KSZ4 223 513 Vol 5 Occasional Writings をりにふれて and Theory of Rhyme 押韻論 Vol 6 A Draft History of Modern Western Philosophy Vol 1 西洋近世哲学史稿 上 Vol 7 A Draft History of Modern Western Philosophy Vol 2 西洋近世哲学史稿 下 Vol 8 Lectures on Contemporary French Philosophy 現代フランス哲学講義 Vol 9 Lectures on Contemporary Philosophy 講義 現代哲学 and Seminars on Trends in Contemporary Philosophy 講演 現代哲学の動向 Vol 10 Lectures on Heidegger s Phenomenological Ontology 講義 ハイデッガーの現象学的存在論 Vol 11 Introductory Lectures on Literature 講義 文学概論 and Lectures on Contingency 講義 偶然性 The lectures entitled Outline of Literature were delivered by Kuki at the University of Tokyo in 1933 24 Among them is the lecture Guzen Contingency which is translated in Marra 2011 Vol 12 Miscellaneous Documents 資料篇 Notes edit Nara Hiroshi 2004 The Structure of Detachment the Aesthetic Vision of Kuki Shuzō with a translation of Iki no kōzō pp 96 97 Nara p 172 a b Nara p 173 a b Parkes Graham 1990 Heidegger and Asian Thought p 158 Marra 2004 p 9 a b Nara p 174 Zwischen einem Japaner und einem Fragenden Marra Michael F 2002 Japanese hermeneutics pp 89 202 p 202 at Google Books Light Stephen 1987 Kuki Shuzō and Jean Paul Sartre p 31 Nussbaum Louis Frederic 2005 Kuki Shuzō in Japan Encyclopedia p 571 p 571 at Google Books Nara p 161 Nara p 149 Nara p 175 Konan University Digital Archive いき の構造 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション 偶然性の問題 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション 人間と実存 九鬼周造 著 33F 69 1 文藝論 九鬼周造著 28B 142 1 巴里心景 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション Takada passim Nara p 9 Takada p 288 Pincus p 52 Marra 2011 p 396References and further reading editSecondary sources edit Botz Bornstein Thorsten Contingency and the Time of the Dream Kuki Shuzo and French Prewar Philosophy in Philosophy East and West 50 4 2000 Iki Style Trace Shuzo Kuki and the Spirit of Hermeneutics in Philosophy East and West 47 4 1997 554 580 Light Stephen Kuki Shuzō and Jean Paul Sartre Influence and Counter Influence in the Early History of Existential Phenomenology Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1987 Marra Michael F Kuki Shuzo A Philosopher s Poetry and Poetics Honolulu University of Hawai i Press 2004 Japanese Hermeneutics Current Debates on Aesthetics and Interpretation Honolulu University of Hawai i Press 2002 Japan s Frames of Reference A Hermeneutics Reader Honolulu University of Hawai i Press 2011 Mayeda Graham Is there a Method to Chance Contrasting Kuki Shuzō s Phenomenological Methodology in the Problem of Contingency with that of His Contemporaries Wilhelm Windelband and Heinrich Rickert In Frontiers of Japanese Philosophy II Neglected Themes and Hidden Variations Edited by Victor S Hori and Melissa Anne Marie Curley Nagoya Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture 2008 Japanese Philosophers on Society and Culture Nishida Kitarō Watsuji Tetsurō and Kuki Shuzō Lanham Lexington Books 2020 Time for Ethics Temporality and the Ethical Ideal in Emmanuel Levinas and Kuki Shuzō in Comparative and Continental Philosophy 4 1 2012 105 124 Time Space and Ethics in the Philosophy of Watsuji Tetsurō Kuki Shuzō and Martin Heidegger New York Routledge 2006 Nara Hiroshi The Structure of Detachment the Aesthetic Vision of Kuki Shuzō with a Translation of Iki no kōzō Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 2004 Parkes Graham Heidegger and Asian Thought Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 1990 Pincus Leslie Authenticating Culture in Imperial Japan Kuki Shuzō and the Rise of National Aesthetics Berkeley University of California Press 1996 Saitō Takako The Human and the Absolute in the Writings of Kuki Shuzō Archive In Volume 3 of Frontiers of Japanese Philosophy 58 72 Edited by James W Heisig and Mayuko Uehara written as Uehara Mayuko Nagoya Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture 2008 In Search of the Absolute Kuki Shuzō and Shinran Archive In Volume 7 of Frontiers of Japanese Philosophy 232 246 Edited by James W Heisig and Rein Raud Nagoya Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture 2010 Sakabe Megumi Washida Seiichi and Fujita Masakatsu eds Kuki Shuzō no sekai Tokyo Minerva Shobō 2002 St Clair Robert N The Phenomenology of Self Across Cultures In Intercultural Communication Studies 13 3 2004 8 26 Takada Yasunari Shuzo Kuki or A Sense of Being In between Archive In Takada Yasunari Transcendental Descent Essays in Literature and Philosophy Collection UTCP 2 The University of Tokyo Center for Philosophy UTCP p 281 295 Yasuda Takeshi and Michitarō Tada Iki no kōzō o yomu Tokyo Asahi Sensho 1979 External links edit nbsp Japan portal nbsp Biography portal 九鬼 周造 Kuki Shuzō at www aozora gr jp in Japanese 九鬼周造 Kuki Shuzō at www isis ne jp in Japanese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shuzō Kuki amp oldid 1220811462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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