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Books published by University of Hawai'i Press

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  • by Noel J. Kent
    £23.49

    When it first appeared, this historical overview of the evolution of Hawai'i's political economy opened a new and innovative perspective on Hawai'i's history and contemporary dilemmas. Now, a decade later, Kent adds an epilogue providing an overview of the Japanese investment spree, the impact of national economic restructuring on Hawai'i's tourism industry, the crises of local politics, and the Hawaiian sovereignty movement as a potential source of renewal.

  • by Kimura
    £25.49

  • - Understanding Tanizaki, Kawabata and Mishima
    by Gwenn B. Petersen
    £27.49

  • - Agricultural Ecology in South East Asia
    by Lucien M. Hanks
    £23.49

  • by O A Bushnell
    £28.49

    In nine essays, Bushnell discusses the profound and various impacts on a long isolated people of infectious diseases brought by Captain James Cook in 1778 and subsequent visitors.

  • - Sekimon Shingaku in Eighteenth-century Japan
    by Janine Anderson Sawada
    £35.99

  • by Robert Louis Stevenson
    £22.49 - 73.99

    A collection of little-known essays and stories written about Hawaii during Stevenson's travels through the Hawaiian Islands. It includes a series of letters discussing the treatment of lepers in the Islands, and Stevenson's famous defence of Father Damien and the Reverend Dr Hyde.

  • - Pearl Harbor
    by Michael Slackman
    £28.49

  • by Michael R. Saso
    £19.49

    Describes the four basic meditations of Tantric Buddhism: the Eighteen-path Mandala, the Lotus-womb Mandala, the Vajra-thunder Mandala, and the Goma Rite of Fire. The book summarizes the teachings of Tendai Tantric Buddhism, as practiced on Mt. Hiei, Kyoto, by a Master of the Homan devotional (Bakhti) school.

  • by Peter J. Herman
    £17.99

  • by Aldyth Morris
    £12.99

  • by Peter H. Lee
    £31.49

    The history of Korea in the twentieth century has been a grim succession of oppressions, humiliations, and betrayals. Yet through it all, modern Korean writers have been able not only to find their own distinctive voices but to forge a national literature that speaks eloquently of the survival of the human spirit in times of crisis. This anthology includes the finest translations available of representative works in all the major genres, including poetry, fiction, essays, and drama. Readers will gain a clear sense of the development of twentieth-century Korean literature and a vivid impression of the resilience, strength, and tenacity of modern Korean writers.

  •  
    £22.49

    Offering insights into racial and cultural stereotyping and popular notions of imperialism, Asia in Western Fiction traces how Asia and Asians have been depicted in novels and other works of Western fiction, with an emphasis on works available in English. The eleven scholarly essays examine Western literary treatment of South, Southeast, and East Asia, as well as Muslim culture in general. Useful lists of novels and short stories either written in or translated into English are included.

  • by Esther M.T. Sato, L. Shishido & M. Sakihara
    £27.49

    This teacher's manual is designed to accompany volume four of the "Japanese Now" learning programme. This part of the programme is aimed at expanding student's vocabulary and grammar through conversation and discussion of Japanese culture and various socially appropriate styles of speech.

  • by Rita Knipe
    £32.49

    Mythology flows like a subterranean stream throughout Hawai'i. Rita Knipe has selected a number of characteristic myths and mythological figures from the rich pantheon of Hawaiian deities. As she retells their stories, illustrated by Hawaii artist Dietrich Varez, the transposition of such primal drama to the pages of this book becomes poetic theater. The dramatic plots are myths and legends chosen from the oral traditions of unique island people, but the underlying themes and symbols are archetypal and eternal. Drawing parallels between Hawaiian mythology, universal patterns, and individual behavior, the author illustrates certain basic Jungian concepts and explains how we express them in the drama of our own lives.

  • - Prologue to the Pacific War
     
    £36.99

  • - Jesuit Accommodation and the Origins of Sinology
    by D. E. Mungello
    £30.49 - 102.99

  • - Secrets of Starting Your Own Business in Our State
    by Dennis K. Kondo
    £28.49

    Written in easy-to-understand language, Business Basics in Hawaii introduces the lay person to some of the basic principles of business. Readers benefit from lessons learned by other business people through an examination of two hypothetical companies. Some of the topics covered include estimating market potential and monthly operating costs, planning an advertising campaign with local media, negotiating a lease, and reviewing some Hawaii business tax laws.

  • by Eleanor C. Nordyke
    £28.49

  • by Douglas L. Oliver
    £23.49

  • by Margaret K. Pai
    £31.49

    Few personal accounts have been written about early Korean immigrants (yi-min) to Hawaii. In The Dreams of Two Yi-min Margaret Pai recounts the experiences of her parents, Do In Kwon and Hee Kyung Lee, while unfolding the rich fabric of Korean society and culture in Japanese-occupied Korea and Hawaii's Korean immigrant community during the early years of this century. Pai tells her mother's arrival in Honolulu as a "picture bride" and of her return to Korea and subsequent imprisonment by the Japanese for her participation in the demonstration of March 1, 1919. Pai also tells the story of her father--a man deemed odd, intelligent, and even crazy by friends and competitors alike-- and of his passion for inventing and talent for business. The Dreams of Two Yi-min is an honest and affectionate portrait of two courageous and strong-willed people. It is the story of the search for a good life, a search that forms a part of the larger history of the Korean experience in Hawaii.

  • - Of Tales and the Telling of Tales
    by Laurel Kendall
    £25.49

  • by Will Kyselka
    £23.49 - 59.99

  • by Basho Matsuo & Lucien Stryk
    £28.49

    In a thoughtful and perceptive introduction, Stryk sets the stage for an appreciation of what Basho's poetry has to offer, sketching his life, his times, his spirit. For most of his life Basho was a recluse. He lived on the outskirts of Edo (Tokyo) in a hut shaded by an exotic banana tree (the Basho). When he traveled, he relied entirely on the hospitality of temples and fellow poets. His poems were strongly influenced by the Zen sect of Buddhism and its ideals of lightness, detachment, and appreciation of the commonplace. Basho aspired to and achieved unity of life and art, his poems become inseparable from nature.

  • by Marcia Brown
    £24.49

  • by Michael R. Sakamoto
    £26.49

  • - Past and Present
     
    £25.49

    Text adopted at University of Kansas; University of Missouri, Columbia.

  •  
    £26.49

    Social and political conflict in postwar Japan is the subject of this volume, which draws together a series of field-based studies by North American and Japanese sociologists, anthropologists, and political scientists. It focuses attention on the sources of conflict and the ways in which conflict is expressed and managed. This book challenges the widely held theories stressing the harmony and vertical structure of social relations in Japan, which imply that conflict is only of minimal importance. Not only does the research presented here force recognition of the existence and complexity of conflict patterns in Japan, its approach to conflict provides a dynamic, empirical, and interdisciplinary focus on social and political processes in the postwar period. The editors' theoretical introduction is followed by a general conceptual piece by one of Japan's foremost sociologists. Ten empirical studies, each offering both new data and new insights on known data about Japanese social and political systems, analyze conflict and conflict resolution in interpersonal relations, industrial relations, education, rural villages, government bureaucracy, parliament, political parties, and interest groups, including how they are manifested in women's and student protest movements and portrayed in the mass media. Western social science conflict theories are applied to enhance our understanding of both the universal and the unique elements in Japanese social and political institutions.

  • - From Early Times to the Nineteenth Century
    by Peter H. Lee
    £31.49 - 88.99

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