研究キーワード (8件):
Langauge and Lingusitics
, Consciousness and Transcendence
, Ancient Greek and Latin
, Homeric Studies
, Philososphy and Religion
, Yeats's Studies
, 英米文学
, 英語文学
論文 (25件):
The Dancer from the Dance - the Problem of the One and the Many in Yeats’s "Among School Children". Studies in International English Culture. 2011. 31. 63-75
Yeats's "Sailing to Byzantium" The "Esoteric" Four-Stanza Structure. Orbis Litterarum, Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 2010. 65. 1. 22-56
Andromache's Fate: Further Remarks on an Alternate Interpretation of Hector's 'Farewell Speech' in Book VI of the Iliad. Journal of the College of Industrial Technology, Nihon University. 2009. 42. 9-17
Michael Genung. Hector's Prophecy of Doom: Tense, Mood, and Contingency in Homer's Iliad. 異文化の諸相. 2008. 29. 111-124
A Study of the Asterisk-marked “Important Words” in English-Japanese Dictionaries. Asialex 2003 Proceedings, The Third Asialex Biennial International Conference, Tokyo. Asian Association for Lexicography. 2003. 81-88
Vocabulary-Level Assessment for ESP Texts Used in the Field of Industrial Technology. Proceedings of the KATE 2003 Winter International Conference, The Korea Association of Teachers of English. 2002. 32-36
Zen Buddhistic, Cabalistic, and Pythagorean Influences in Yeats’ ‘The Statues’”. Journal of the College of Industrial Technology, Nihon University B. 1998. 31. 29-43
書籍 (1件):
実際のティーム・ティーチング、理論と方法とスピーキング
1989
講演・口頭発表等 (10件):
Odysseus’s Homecoming - A Reading in Japanese
(A reading before the annual meeting of The Readers of Homer - Kos City, Kos, Greece 2010)
Odysseus in the Underworld: A Reading in Ancient Greek and Japanese
(A reading before the First South American Conference of The Readers of Homer, The University of Montevideo, Montevideo, Uruguay 2010)
“The Patroclea, Rhapsody 16:” A Reading in Ancient Greek and Japanese
(A reading before the First South American Conference of The Readers of Homer, The University of Montevideo, Montevideo, Uruguay 2010)
A Comparative Reading of Homer's Odyssey in Ancient Greek, English, and Japanese
(A reading before the annual meeting of The Readers of Homer, Daskalopetra, Chios, Greece 2009)