None of the trio of writers appointed for the project had either an academic or activist background in feminism: Fukaya Kazuko was a psychologist, Tanaka
Toji was an education scholar, and Tamura Takeshi, a practicing psychiatrist.
Third, because U.S.-born Japanese Americans may not be likely to identify with their Japanese culture (because of the reasons described by
Toji, 2003) and this study recruited subjects from Asian cultural events, it is likely that very few U.S.-born Japanese people attended these events or participated in this study.
In this sense, then,
Toji's demise signals the difficulties of reconciling two reductive categorizations of the immigrant experience, one based in progressive idealism, the other in xenophobic paranoia.
Veliau
toji improvizacijos forma romenu dramaturgu buvo panaudota kaip atskiras komedijos zanras.
Similar iconographic programs can still be found in the eighth-century temples of Yakushi-ji and Shin-Yakushiji in Nara, the ninth-century
Toji and Jingoji esoteric temples in Kyoto, and numerous lesser known temples throughout Japan.
Unless noted, the images are from the following source: After Sekai
Toji Zenshu vol.19, Tokyo, 1980; plates 39,58,192 and 191.
Some of the hand bookbinding techniques that are common today includes Saddle Stitch, Yotsume
Toji, Perfect Binding, Hardcover Binding and Coptic Binding.
Furthermore, renowned UNESCO World Heritage sites such as the Kiyomizu Temple and
Toji Temple are both less than a 10-minute drive away.
During the Heian period, the axial Suzoku (Red Pheonix) Road divided the capital in half, with Saiji (West Temple) and
Toji (East Temple) on either side of the main avenue.
TOJI, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ASIAN-AMERICAN STUDIES, CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LONG BEACH, AND AUTHOR OF "ASSESSING THE EMPLOYMENT IMPACTS OF THE LOS ANGELES CIVIL UNREST OF 1992: FURTHERING RACIAL DIVISIONS," ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT QUARTERLY (1997)