Home :: Books :: Sports  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports

Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Bushido the Warriors Code

Bushido the Warriors Code

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $10.20
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fantastic introduction to the way of the warrior
Review: Bushido is literally translated "warrior path" and this book explains that path in to-the-point detail.

the whole book is filled with inspiring quotes, practical advice and a good look at what a feudal samurai had to be. Some other things are explained, such as suppuku (ritual suicide), honor, commitment and more.

For those interested in the martial arts, Japanese history and fighting cultures... this is an excellent book. It is well combined with "The Book of Five Rings" by Miyamoto Musashi, "The Art of War" By Sun Tzu, "The Tao te Ching" by Lao Tzu and "budoshoshinshu" by Daidoji Yuzan.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fantastic introduction to the way of the warrior
Review: Bushido is literally translated "warrior path" and this book explains that path in to-the-point detail.

the whole book is filled with inspiring quotes, practical advice and a good look at what a feudal samurai had to be. Some other things are explained, such as suppuku (ritual suicide), honor, commitment and more.

For those interested in the martial arts, Japanese history and fighting cultures... this is an excellent book. It is well combined with "The Book of Five Rings" by Miyamoto Musashi, "The Art of War" By Sun Tzu, "The Tao te Ching" by Lao Tzu and "budoshoshinshu" by Daidoji Yuzan.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great book, very informative and detailed
Review: Inazo Nitobe takes the time to explain the concept of Bushido in great detail while including Western examples to enable the reader to have a greater understanding of his meaning. He presents the book in various categories, ranging from the origins of Bushido, the training and positioning of women, from the education of a samurai to the gruesome details of the Hara-kiri or seppuku (ritual suicide). This book is a must for anyone who wishes to understand Bushido, the mentality of the samurai, and the unique mindset of the Asian-especially the Japanese-way of thinking. Other books which I heartily recommend are: A Book of Five Rings-by Miyamoto Musashi, Hagakure-by Tsunetomo Yamamoto, The Code of the Samurai-by Daidoji Yuzan (translated by A.L. Sadler), Runaway Horses-by Yukio Mishima and Legends of the Samurai-by Hiraoki Sato

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Bushido- Ways of a modern warrior
Review: Make your world and yourself a better place by heeding the advice of this book. Timeless and to the point.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Formations of a "philosophy" through interpretation
Review: One of the earliest questions western scholars put to their Japanese counterparts was "What is Bushido?" In response, selections of "Hagakure" were translated and printed in England. The result? As could be expected, no one knew what to make of it and took it to mean Japan had been living in a dark ages for centuries.

Now, books like this one have appeared to offer slightly more light on the "philosophy" of Bushido.

Unfortunately, even this volume can said to have one major flaw. Where the old tranlsation of "Hagakure" lacked explainations, "Bushido" seems to overemphasize the "philosophical" end of bushido, as seen through modern eyes. Perhaps the thing most lacking in all of this was a view of how this idea of "the way of the warrior" changed through Japanese history, and as well more emphisis on the fact that an actual formed "code" (as one might expect to see in European knights) never appeared despite occasional writing on the subject and the presence of legal obligations.

This book will serve as a good guide to one aspect, or indeed one inturpretation of what "bushido" means. But unlike a civil guide to manners, as appeared in Victorian England, Bushido was never set in stone as such. Treat it as one possible "summary" of the life of the warrior, rather than "the guide to...".

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Think like a Samurai
Review: The book will help you get into the mind of the Samurai. Has an excellent description of an actual sepuku ceremony.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Think like a Samurai
Review: The book will help you get into the mind of the Samurai. Has an excellent description of an actual sepuku ceremony.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Good Primer
Review: This is a good introduction to Bushido for Western readers. A little dramatic but then again, it does capture the ethos of the subject.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Historically informative, but not spiritually enlightening
Review: This was undoubtedly one of the most informative books on the subject of Bushido I've read, but there are very particular issues I have with it. First, the source of these issues perhaps lies in the author: though he is Japanese, there is no doubt in my mind from the reading that he is a Western thinker, of staunch Christian upbringing. Though he is an excellent historian, he is by no means a bushi, nor is he in any way an Eastern thinker (much of bushido derives from Japanese Zen Buddhism).

What this leads to is typically insensitive, Eurocentric judgements of the way of life of the warriors of feudal Japan. For instance, I found very distasteful his treatment of young, "hot-headed" bushi rushing to commit seppuku, ritualized honorable suicide, without supposedly proper motivation. To have treated this matter and other such topics with full understanding and sensitivity, the author would have had to be a warrior, himself. Evidently, he was not. Had he been, fundamental concepts such as honor and duty would have wholly changed his point of view.

Further, though his points are made with great attention to historical detail, he tends to emphasize denial of the self and other aspects of discipline, whereas a historian who was also a modern warrior would have emphasized, among other things, the intertwining of life and death. These things that lie at the heart of bushi would have explained, for instance, seppuku far better.

Ultimately, the decision to read this book should be based on what the reader wants. If he or she seeks a straight-forward explanation of the tenents of bushido with little else, the overall excellent history presented in this book should be quite sufficient. If the reader wants, however, a more spiritual treatise delving into the philosophical origins of bushido, for the benefit of modern bushi, this book falls short.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates