Japanese enryo-sasshi communication and the psychology of amae: Reconsideration and reconceptualization. Application of Yin and Yang and the Five Elements in Self-counseling: An Intrapersonal Communication Perspective in Japan In many of the accounts of heritage-making presented here, citizens and civil...
This paper analysed the nature of autonomy, in particular respect for autonomy in medical ethics/bioethics in Japan. We have undertaken a literature survey in Japanese and English and begin with the historical background and explanation of the Japanese word Jiritsu (autonomy). We go on to identi...
Inspired by Kyoko Taniguchi's article (this issue), I deploy the Japanese concept amae to engage the mother as a collective erotic object. Amae also helps me express gratitude to my psychoanalytic mothers for their tireless efforts on behalf of this journal....
Amae(Japanese): The urge to crumple into the arms of a loved one to be coddled and comforted. Amazed or amazement: A feeling of great surprise or wonder. Ambiguphobia(coined by American novelist David Foster Wallace): Feeling uncomfortable about leaving things open to interpretation. Amenable:A...
[Considerations on the fundamental structure and characteristics of the "Amae" phenomenon--clarification of the "Amae-theory (Takeo Doi)"] It is well-known that Takeo Doi tried to describe Japanese culture using the Japanese term "Amae". However, with many Japanese students of psychotherapy po....
The Perception of the 'World' in Dazai Osamu's No Longer Human – Focused on the Psychology of'amae' – J Shin - 《Journal of Japanese Studies》 被引量: 0发表: 2017年 Decentering in the Literary Works of Dazai Osamu : Focusing on the Works in the War Period . , '' . , . , '...
calls “desire of/for the mother” and what Doi attempted to explain using the everyday Japanese word, amae, a wish to “depend and presume upon another's love or bask in another's indulgence,” are both what is understood in the clinical psychoanalytic language as maternal erotic ...
calls "desire of/for the mother" and what Doi attempted to explain using the everyday Japanese word, amae, a wish to "depend and presume upon another's love or bask in another's indulgence," are both what is understood in the clinical psychoanalytic language as maternal erotic transference....