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Life Science / Sports sciences |
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Professional Memberships 【 display / non-display 】
Papers 【 display / non-display 】
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La signification du match France-Japon de 1928 pour la France Reviewed
( 50 ) 16 - 30 2024.6
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中学生・高校生年代における全国競技大会の展開(1946-2001) Reviewed
中澤篤史, 星野映
スポーツ科学研究 19 42 - 66 2022.11
Joint Work
Publisher:早稲田大学スポーツ科学学術院
Other Link: https://kaken.nii.ac.jp/grant/KAKENHI-PROJECT-19K11533/
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French sport and de Coubertin after World War I : until the 1924 Paris Olympic Games Reviewed
Hoshino, Utsuru
Cultural Research of the Olympics 6 ( 6 ) 87 - 102 2021.6
Single Work
Authorship:Lead author
Other Link: https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/books/R000000004-I031892789
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Utsuru HOSHINO
Etudes Françaises ( 46 ) 3 - 13 2020.6
Single Work
Authorship:Lead author Publisher:Société d'histoire des relations nippo-françaises
Other Link: http://id.ndl.go.jp/bib/030486198
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Utsuru Hoshino
Japan Journal of Physical Education, Health and Sport Sciences 64 ( 1 ) 187 - 203 2019.6
Single Work
Authorship:Lead author Publisher:Japan Society of Physical Education, Health and Sport Sciences
From 1940 to 1944, Paris was occupied by the German army. The “Vichy” government began to reform sports activities for French citizens, and under the new Vichy policy, many sports saw an expansion of popularity. The expansion of judo in France during this period was particularly dramatic. This article examines how judo was practiced in German-occupied Paris, and how it acquired the status of a sport in France, with reference to the activities of the Jiu-Jitsu Club de France and its historical context in Paris at that time.<br>
In occupied Paris, the Jiu-Jitsu Club and its judoka, especially Paul Bonét-Maury, president of the club, and Mikinosuke Kawaishi, who provided technical guidance, promoted judo as a sport. In the first half of the Occupation, the club held low-key public demonstrations. Also, practitioners in clubs were trained on the basis of teaching methods devised by Kawaishi, which included aspects such as the color belt system, and the establishment of expensive membership fees despite the Occupation situation. As a result, many intellectual professionals and industrial capitalists with economic resources played a principal role as judoka. Furthermore, by encouraging students to open new clubs, the number of judoka practicing Kawaishi judo increased. These factors remained characteristic of French judo after the Second World War.<br>
In the latter half of the Occupation Period, the Jiu-Jitsu Club de France joined the French Wrestling Federation, so that judo became better known publicly, and in late May 1943, the First French Judo Championship was held. The Championship was held continuously in subsequent years, and received recognition of being “worthy to be aligned with other sports”.<br>
The German army was not directly involved with judo in Paris, but the fact that the Jiu-Jitsu Club de France expanded its activities while adapting to the circumstances of the Occupation encouraged the official recognition of judo in Paris.Other Link: https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jjpehss/64/1/64_18055/_pdf
Books and Other Publications 【 display / non-display 】
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The encyclopedia of sport sociology
( Role: Contributor)
2025.3 ( ISBN:9784621310397 )
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新時代のスポーツ教育学―Neo Sport Pedagogy and Andragogy―
小野雄大, 梶将徳( Role: Contributor , 第13章1-3節)
小学館集英社プロダクション 2022.8 ( ISBN:4796878947 )
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フランス柔道とは何か : 教育・学校・スポーツ
星野, 映, 中嶋, 哲也, 磯, 直樹, 小林, 純子, 有山, 篤利( Role: Joint editor)
青弓社 2022.6 ( ISBN:9784787235060 )
Presentations 【 display / non-display 】
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From Performer to Wrestler: Sumo Tournaments in France in the 1910s)
Encounters between Japanese Budo and Western Combative Sports: Cultural Confrontation and Exchange through Interdisciplinary Matches 2025.3
Event date: 2025.3