No. Station Name (Japanese) 역명
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Outdoor Club Japan (OCJ) 国際 アウトドア・クラブ・ジャパン Events
Outdoor Club Japan (OCJ) 国際 アウトドア・クラブ・ジャパン Events Norikuradake Super Downhill 10 March Friday to 12 March Monday If you are not satisfied ski & snowboard in ski area. You can skiing from summit. Norikuradake(3026m)is one of hundred best mountain in Japan. This time is good condition of backcountry ski season. Go up to the summit of Norikuradake by walk from the top of last lift(2000m). Climb about 5 hours and down to bottom lift(1500m) about 50 min. (Deta of last time) Transport: Train from Shinjuku to Matsumoto and Taxi from Matsumoto to Norikura-kogen. Return : Bus from Norikura-kogen to Sinshimashima and train to Shinjuku. Meeting Time & Place : 19:30 Shijuku st. platform 5 car no.1 for super Azusa15 Cost : About Yen30000 Train Shinjuku to matsumoto Yen6200(ow) but should buy 4coupon ticket each coupon Yen4190 or You can buy discount ticket shop in town price is similar. (price is non-reserve seat) Taxi about Yen13000 we will share. Return bus Yen1300 and local train Yen680. Inn Yen14000+tax 2 overnight 2 breakfast 1 dinner (no dinner Friday) Japanese room and hot spring! Necessary equipment : Skiers & Telemarkers need a nylon mohair skin. Snowboarders need snowshoes. Crampons(over 8point!) Clothes: Gore-tex jacket and pants, fleece, hut, musk, gloves, sunglasses, headlamp, thermos, lunch, sunscreen If you do not go up to the summit, you can enjoy the ski area and hot springs. 1 day lift pass Yen4000 Limit : 12persons (priority is downhill from summit) In Japanese : 026m)の頂上からの滑降です。 ゲレンデスキーに物足りないスキーヤー、スノーボーダー向き。 山スキーにいいシーズンですが、天気次第なので一応土、日と2日間の時間をとりました。 -
Pdf/Rosen Eng.Pdf Rice fields) Connnecting Otsuki to Mt.Fuji and Kawaguchiko
Iizaka Onsen Yonesaka Line Yonesaka Yamagata Shinkansen TOKYO & AROUND TOKYO Ōu Line Iizakaonsen Local area sightseeing recommendations 1 Awashima Port Sado Gold Mine Iyoboya Salmon Fukushima Ryotsu Port Museum Transportation Welcome to Fukushima Niigata Tochigi Akadomari Port Abukuma Express ❶ ❷ ❸ Murakami Takayu Onsen JAPAN Tarai-bune (tub boat) Experience Fukushima Ogi Port Iwafune Port Mt.Azumakofuji Hanamiyama Sakamachi Tuchiyu Onsen Fukushima City Fruit picking Gran Deco Snow Resort Bandai-Azuma TTOOKKYYOO information Niigata Port Skyline Itoigawa UNESCO Global Geopark Oiran Dochu Courtesan Procession Urabandai Teradomari Port Goshiki-numa Ponds Dake Onsen Marine Dream Nou Yahiko Niigata & Kitakata ramen Kasumigajo & Furumachi Geigi Airport Urabandai Highland Ibaraki Gunma ❹ ❺ Airport Limousine Bus Kitakata Park Naoetsu Port Echigo Line Hakushin Line Bandai Bunsui Yoshida Shibata Aizu-Wakamatsu Inawashiro Yahiko Line Niigata Atami Ban-etsu- Onsen Nishi-Wakamatsu West Line Nagaoka Railway Aizu Nō Naoetsu Saigata Kashiwazaki Tsukioka Lake Itoigawa Sanjo Firework Show Uetsu Line Onsen Inawashiro AARROOUUNNDD Shoun Sanso Garden Tsubamesanjō Blacksmith Niitsu Takada Takada Park Nishikigoi no sato Jōetsu Higashiyama Kamou Terraced Rice Paddies Shinkansen Dojo Ashinomaki-Onsen Takashiba Ouchi-juku Onsen Tōhoku Line Myoko Kogen Hokuhoku Line Shin-etsu Line Nagaoka Higashi- Sanjō Ban-etsu-West Line Deko Residence Tsuruga-jo Jōetsumyōkō Onsen Village Shin-etsu Yunokami-Onsen Railway Echigo TOKImeki Line Hokkaid T Kōriyama Funehiki Hokuriku -
Contemporary Popular Beliefs in Japan
Hugvísindasvið Contemporary popular beliefs in Japan Ritgerð til B.A.-prófs Lára Ósk Hafbergsdóttir September 2010 Háskóli Íslands Hugvísindadeild Japanskt mál og menning Contemporary popular beliefs in Japan Ritgerð til B.A.-prófs Lára Ósk Hafbergsdóttir Kt.: 130784-3219 Leiðbeinandi: Gunnella Þorgeirsdóttir September 2010 Abstract This thesis discusses contemporary popular beliefs in Japan. It asks the questions what superstitions are generally known to Japanese people and if they have any affects on their behavior and daily lives. The thesis is divided into four main chapters. The introduction examines what is normally considered to be superstitious beliefs as well as Japanese superstition in general. The second chapter handles the methodology of the survey written and distributed by the author. Third chapter is on the background research and analysis which is divided into smaller chapters each covering different categories of superstitions that can be found in Japan. Superstitions related to childhood, death and funerals, lucky charms like omamori and maneki neko and various lucky days and years especially yakudoshi and hinoeuma are closely examined. The fourth and last chapter contains the conclusion and discussion which covers briefly the results of the survey and what other things might be of interest to investigate further. Table of contents 1. Introduction .................................................................................................................... 3 1.1 What is superstition? ............................................................................................... -
HIRATA KOKUGAKU and the TSUGARU DISCIPLES by Gideon
SPIRITS AND IDENTITY IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY NORTHEASTERN JAPAN: HIRATA KOKUGAKU AND THE TSUGARU DISCIPLES by Gideon Fujiwara A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in The Faculty of Graduate Studies (Asian Studies) THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver) April 2013 © Gideon Fujiwara, 2013 ABSTRACT While previous research on kokugaku , or nativism, has explained how intellectuals imagined the singular community of Japan, this study sheds light on how posthumous disciples of Hirata Atsutane based in Tsugaru juxtaposed two “countries”—their native Tsugaru and Imperial Japan—as they transitioned from early modern to modern society in the nineteenth century. This new perspective recognizes the multiplicity of community in “Japan,” which encompasses the domain, multiple levels of statehood, and “nation,” as uncovered in recent scholarship. My analysis accentuates the shared concerns of Atsutane and the Tsugaru nativists toward spirits and the spiritual realm, ethnographic studies of commoners, identification with the north, and religious thought and worship. I chronicle the formation of this scholarly community through their correspondence with the head academy in Edo (later Tokyo), and identify their autonomous character. Hirao Rosen conducted ethnography of Tsugaru and the “world” through visiting the northern island of Ezo in 1855, and observing Americans, Europeans, and Qing Chinese stationed there. I show how Rosen engaged in self-orientation and utilized Hirata nativist theory to locate Tsugaru within the spiritual landscape of Imperial Japan. Through poetry and prose, leader Tsuruya Ariyo identified Mount Iwaki as a sacred pillar of Tsugaru, and insisted one could experience “enjoyment” from this life and beyond death in the realm of spirits. -
Feature-Neujahr
10 Feature I Das Neujahrsfest in Japan Einleitung Das wichtigste Jahresfest Japans ist das Neujahrsfest. In Japan galt ursprünglich der Mondkalender, dessen Monate von Vollmond zu Vollmond 29,53 Tage dauerten. Der zugleich als Frühlingsanfang gefeierte Neujahrstag lag damals auf dem etwa 4-6 Wochen nach unserem heutigen Jahresbeginn liegenden ersten Vollmondtag des neuen Mondjahres. Als der japanische Kaiserhof 604 n. Chr. aus China den Mond- Sonnen-Kalender übernahm, verlegte er den Jahresbeginn auf den Neumondtag. Da der tatsächliche Frühlingsbeginn in Japan, wo im Februar u.a. schon die Pflaumen blühen, jedoch näher an dem alten Vollmond-Neujahrstermin liegt, beschränkten sich die Neujahrsfeiern am ersten Neumondtag anfangs auf den Kaiserhof und Hofadel. Das Volk hielt lange seinem durch den neuen Kalender auf den 15.1. ge- rutschten „Vollmond-Neujahrstag“ die Treue und ging erst allmählich dazu über, zu- sätzlich auch das von der Obrigkeit propagierte, an Neumond liegende neue Neujahr zu feiern. So kam es, dass sich die regional z.T. mit sehr unterschiedlichen Ritualen und Bräuchen begangene Neujahrszeit bald vom 1.1. bis zum 16.1. (Mondsonnen- Monat) erstreckte. Die Tage vom 1. bis zum 3.1. (mancherorts auch bis zum 5., 7., oder 14.1) werden als Großes Neujahr (ō-shōgatsu) und die Tage um den 15.1. (meist der 14. bis 16.1.) als Kleines Neujahr (ko-shōgatsu) bezeichnet. Seit der Einführung des gregorianischen Kalenders 1872 in Japan wird Neujahr fast überall zwischen dem 1. und 16. Januar gefeiert. Nur sehr wenige Gemeinden voll- ziehen zusätzlich zum modernen Neujahr heute noch einige Neujahrsriten an den traditionellen Terminen des Mond-Sonnen-Kalenders. -
Childbearing in Japanese Society: Traditional Beliefs and Contemporary Practices
Childbearing in Japanese Society: Traditional Beliefs and Contemporary Practices by Gunnella Thorgeirsdottir A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Sheffield Faculty of Social Sciences School of East Asian Studies August 2014 ii iii iv Abstract In recent years there has been an oft-held assumption as to the decline of traditions as well as folk belief amidst the technological modern age. The current thesis seeks to bring to light the various rituals, traditions and beliefs surrounding pregnancy in Japanese society, arguing that, although changed, they are still very much alive and a large part of the pregnancy experience. Current perception and ideas were gathered through a series of in depth interviews with 31 Japanese females of varying ages and socio-cultural backgrounds. These current perceptions were then compared to and contrasted with historical data of a folkloristic nature, seeking to highlight developments and seek out continuities. This was done within the theoretical framework of the liminal nature of that which is betwixt and between as set forth by Victor Turner, as well as theories set forth by Mary Douglas and her ideas of the polluting element of the liminal. It quickly became obvious that the beliefs were still strong having though developed from a person-to- person communication and into a set of knowledge aquired by the mother largely from books, magazines and or offline. v vi Acknowledgements This thesis would never have been written had it not been for the endless assistance, patience and good will of a good number of people. -
Expanding the Scope of Online Train Seating Reservation Services For
August 28, 2018 East Japan Railway Company Expanding the scope of online train seating reservation services for travelers visiting from abroad - Adding more services to the Joyful Trains lineup, very popular overseas! - East Japan Railway Company (Head office: Shibuya-ku, Tokyo; President and CEO: Yuji Fukasawa; below, "JR East") is working to make it easier for passengers from overseas to enjoy rail travel. We plan to add 13 new “Joyful Train” services to the JR-EAST Train Reservation online designated seat reservations service for foreign travelers visiting Japan. We will keep striving to expand our services and improve the convenience of our products to ensure that passengers from overseas are able to enjoy pleasant and convenient rail travel. 1. Newly added “Joyful Trains” services In addition to its existing five train services, which include the much-loved Resort Shirakami, the JR-EAST Train Reservation online seating reservation service for overseas travelers visiting Japan is planning to add 13 appealing new train services to its lineup. These will include SL steam locomotives, which are very popular with foreign travelers visiting Japan, as well as the Koshino Shu*Kura train and other rail services for travelers to enjoy. This service allows travelers to reserve designated seating in advance of their visit to Japan, making it extremely convenient and easy to plan a trip. Additions to the Joyful Trains lineup 1 Resort Umineko (Hachinohe Line) 2 Resort Asunaro Shimokita (Ominato Line) 3 SL Ginga (Kamaishi Line) 4 POKÉMON with YOU Train (Ofunato Line) 5 Zipangu Hiraizumi (Tohoku Main Line) 6 Resort Minori (Riku-East Line) Koshino Shu*Kura (Shinetsu Main Line) 7 SL Minakami (Joetsu Line) Renamed “SL Gunma Minakami” from October 2018 8 SL Usui (Shinetsu Main Line) Renamed “SL Gunma Yokokawa” from October 2018 9 Koshino Shu*Kura (Shinetsu Main Line) 10 SL Banetsu Monogatari (Ban-etsu-West Line) 11 Kirakira Uetsu (Uetsu Line) 12 Oykot (Iiyama Line) 13 Resort View Furusato (Shinonoi & Oito Lines) SL Ginga (Kamaishi Line) 2. -
Designing a Tourism Space in a City Context for Social Sustainability
The Sustainable City VIII, Vol. 1 165 Urban tourism: designing a tourism space in a city context for social sustainability N. Giriwati, R. Homma & K. Iki Department of Architecture and Environmental Planning, Kumamoto University, Japan Abstract A town, city or urban region has a potential which stems from its own natural form, sense of place, sense of history, spirit and ethos. Nowadays, in addition to the primary demands of life, many urban areas are facing an increasing population and a growing demand or expectation of the city for tourism activity. However, whilst increasing tourism activity is an important economic backbone for certain cities, tourism facilities are responsible for a substantial increase in environment degradation due to tourists’ rising expectation for services and facilities. The structure of this research is first to present the general overview of urban tourism in Kumamoto City through literature. This study will analyze the potentials of Kumamoto City in the creation of urban tourism, with case studies of other cities, to meet the need of integrative urban planning. The aim of this research is to review and evaluate the importance and influence of sustainability of the city through the view of making a tourism space for people. This analysis seeks to illustrate the phenomenon of urban tourism in the scale of a Japanese city. The conclusion discusses the importance of urban tourism in proposing social sustainability, and the potential for development in the current conditions. Keywords: urban tourism, city spaces, social sustainability. 1 Introduction The rapid growth of tourism has become an important economic backbone for certain cities. -
A POPULAR DICTIONARY of Shinto
A POPULAR DICTIONARY OF Shinto A POPULAR DICTIONARY OF Shinto BRIAN BOCKING Curzon First published by Curzon Press 15 The Quadrant, Richmond Surrey, TW9 1BP This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to http://www.ebookstore.tandf.co.uk/.” Copyright © 1995 by Brian Bocking Revised edition 1997 Cover photograph by Sharon Hoogstraten Cover design by Kim Bartko All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 0-203-98627-X Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-7007-1051-5 (Print Edition) To Shelagh INTRODUCTION How to use this dictionary A Popular Dictionary of Shintō lists in alphabetical order more than a thousand terms relating to Shintō. Almost all are Japanese terms. The dictionary can be used in the ordinary way if the Shintō term you want to look up is already in Japanese (e.g. kami rather than ‘deity’) and has a main entry in the dictionary. If, as is very likely, the concept or word you want is in English such as ‘pollution’, ‘children’, ‘shrine’, etc., or perhaps a place-name like ‘Kyōto’ or ‘Akita’ which does not have a main entry, then consult the comprehensive Thematic Index of English and Japanese terms at the end of the Dictionary first. -
The Gunma Guide – January/February 2013
英語版 TThhee GGuunnmmaa GGuuiiddee January/February 2013 Free Legal Consultation for Foreigners “SOS” in Oizumi When: February 17, 2013 (Sunday) Where: Oizumi-machi Bunkamura 1F (5-24-1 Asahi, Oizumi-machi) Consultants: Lawyer Gyoseishoshi (Visa specialist) Shakai Hoken Romushi (Labor issue specialist) Prior reservations are strongly recommended. Call us at (027) 243-7271 for reservations and inquiries Income Tax & Tax Return All income earners in Japan, residents and non-residents alike, are required to pay income tax, which is a national tax. Your 2012 income tax will be levied on your earnings from January 1 to December 31, i.e. the amount of your total earnings minus deductions from income and multiplied by the appropriate tax rate. The period for receiving filing assistance from the tax office is from Monday, February 18 to Friday, March 15, 2013. Income tax is calculated and paid by employers by way of withholding income tax from employees’ monthly pay and bonuses and then filing a year-end adjustment. Any deficits that resulted from withholding an earner’s income tax after deductions for the year will be refunded. All employed residents are required to file a tax return if any of the followings apply: 1. Your total income from employment exceeded JPY20,000,000 in 2012. 2. You received salaries, etc. from one source only, and your total amount of various types of income (excluding employment and retirement income) exceeded JPY200,000. 3. You received employment income from two or more sources, and the total amount of earnings from employment, etc. not subject to the year-end adjustment or withholding tax and various types of income (excluding employment income and retirement income) exceeded JPY200,000. -
FUKUOKA Meeting Planner’S Guide Contents
FUKUOKA Meeting Planner’s Guide Contents Why Fukuoka Accessibility 3 Compact and stress-free 5 Welcome to Hospitality 6 Business Potentials Business hub linking Eastern Asia and Kyushu’s Fukuoka industries-Fukuoka 7 Competitive cluster in Fukuoka 9 As a major point of exchanges with various places in Asia, Fukuoka has developed its own culture while maintaining a wonderful sense of hospitality known Guide for Meeting Facilities as“Omotenashi.” The city boasts the nation’s highest 4 areas where meeting facilities are concentrated 13 rates of population growth and young population. Convention/exhibition facilities 14 Among the major cities in Japan, Fukuoka draws Hotels 18 particular attention as one of the most vigorous cities. Direct access to countries across the world, the Sports facilities 21 convenience of compactly aggregated city functions and other factors provide the city with the advantage Unique Venues of being able to host various types of meetings, Street party 23 and therefore the number of international Bay area 25 conferences held in the city was the second largest in Traditional Japanese concept of “Wa” 26 the nation for 6 consecutive years*. Fukuoka, a bustling city in beautiful harmony with Museum 26 nature, will bring a variety of experiences beyond your expectations. Activities * Criteria of the Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO) as of 2015 Teambuilding 27 Technology site visit 28 Your Meeting Place Food experiences 29 Traditional culture experiences 30 Sightseeing Fukuoka city tour 32 Dazaifu/Yanagawa city tour 33 Kurume city tour 34 Tourist areas in 6 prefectures of the Kyushu region 35 Reliable Support System One-stop services at Meeting Place Fukuoka (MPF) 38 Support menus for incentive tours 40 By courtesy of Fukuoka city 1 FUKUOKA Meeting Planner's Guide 2 Why Fukuoka Helsinki [Accessibility] Stress-free connection to Beijing Dalian Seoul Qingdao Busan Kyoto the World and Asia Tokyo Osaka Major cities in East Asia are within 2,000 km of Fukuoka. -
Tokyo Metoropolitan Area Railway and Subway Route
NikkNikkō Line NikkNikkō Kuroiso Iwaki Tōbu-nikbu-nikkkō Niigata Area Shimo-imaichi ★ ★ Tōbu-utsunomiya Shin-fujiwara Shibata Shin-tochigi Utsunomiya Line Nasushiobara Mito Uetsu Line Network Map Hōshakuji Utsunomiya Line SAITAMA Tōhoku Shinkansen Utsunomiya Tomobe Ban-etsu- Hakushin Line Hakushin Line Niitsu WestW Line ■Areas where Suica・PASMO can be used RAILWAY Tochigi Oyama Shimodate Mito Line Niigata est Line Shinkansen Moriya Tsukuba Jōmō- Jōetsu Minakami Jōetsu Akagi Kuzū Kōgen ★ Shibukawa Line Shim-Maebashi Ryōmō Line Isesaki Sano Ryōmō Line Hokuriku Kurihashi Minami- ban Line Takasaki Kuragano Nagareyama Gosen Shinkansen(via Nagano) Takasaki Line Minami- Musashino Line NagareyamaNagareyama-- ō KukiKuki J Ōta Tōbu- TOBU Koshigaya ōōtakanomoritakanomori Line Echigo Jōetsu ShinkansenShinkansen Shin-etsu Line Line Annakaharuna Shin-etsu Line Nishi-koizumi Tatebayashi dōbutsu-kōen Kasukabe Shin-etsu Line Yokokawa Kumagaya Higashi-kHigashi-koizumioizumi Tsubamesanjō Higashi- Ogawamachi Sakado Shin- Daishimae Nishiarai Sanuki SanjSanjōō Urawa-Misono koshigaya Kashiwa Abiko Yahiko Minumadai- Line Uchijuku Ōmiya Akabane- Nippori-toneri Liner Ryūgasaki Nagaoka Kawagoeshi Hon-Kawagoe Higashi- iwabuchi Kumanomae shinsuikoen Toride Yorii Ogose Kawaguchi Machiya Kita-ayase TSUKUBA Yahiko Yoshida HachikHachikō Line Kawagoe Line Kawagoe ★ ★ NEW SHUTTLE Komagawa Keihin-Tōhoku Line Ōji Minami-Senju EXPRESS Shim- Shinkansen Ayase Kanamachi Matsudo ★ Seibu- Minami- Sendai Area Higashi-HanHigashi-Hannnō Nishi- Musashino Line Musashi-Urawa Akabane