¡KototoiVol.7
¡Terawaki Ken
Description
[Machine Translation] This is the plain-bound edition of the seventh issue of "kototoi", a series of books for "bringing poetry back into everyday life". kototoi" ( ) was first published after 3.11 with the idea of creating a deeper everyday life. The theme of this issue is "Reconsidering (Publicness). Following the sixth issue, we invited Ken Terawaki, a film critic and former bureaucrat of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, to talk about the future of home education and other forms of learning, as well as about the image and way of life in the post-modern age. In the interview at the end of the book, "The Future We Want to Create," we invite sociologist Tetsushi Yamamoto and historian Junichi Takahashi to discuss the important issue of how to oppose the state and society that "tries to impose norms on people using laws as a shield while changing laws at will," as seen in the recent debate on the right of collective self-defense. It also touches on the important issue of how to resist the state and society that "tries to impose norms on people using the law as a shield, while changing the law to suit itself. It is quite a unique (public) discussion. I think it touches on important viewpoints and issues that are probably not covered in any other magazine, so I hope you will take a look at it. In addition, a cartoon appears in "kototoi" from this issue. Kotoha Fujino, who has been writing a series of articles for "Bessatsu Friend", will start a new series of "Tsukumogochita", a manga that is unique to "kototoi". The main characters are the things in the house, and the manga has a warm feeling. In addition, there will be a letter back and forth by Taro Gomi, poems and music scores by musician Naoryu, poems and photos by Tomoji Nojima, a nature essayist who grew up in home education, an essay on urban agriculture by Kota Oguchi, a novel by Nagai Kejo, an essay by Makiko Ui, an essay on the Ainu people by Makiko Katsuragi, and a series of articles on the Japanese culture, "Tsukumogochita. Makiko Ui's essay on Ainu, and Makoto Katsumata and Masaru Kosaka's essays on degrowth and downshifting. Please order the Japanese-bound edition directly from the publisher.
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