@article{oai:rku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00006937, author = {藤原, 庸介}, journal = {流通経済大学スポーツ健康科学部紀要, The journal of Ryutsu Keizai University, the Faculty of Health & Sport Science}, month = {Mar}, note = {P(論文), 15 top-ranked female Judo athletes in Japan raised their voice about the violence by the head coach in 2012 after the London Olympic Games, and they filed protest to the Japanese Olympic Committee (JOC). JOC formed 5-member investigation team, and interviewed all the athletes and coaches for total 40 hours. In this paper I examine their actual testimonies and sort out the problems. This incident was widely known as a “violence case”, however, their testimonies showed that there were complex of problems including violence, broken communications in the team, disregarding injuries, a torrent of wild words by coaches and unclear selection rules. These combined problems seem to be originated in the outdated internal rules and age-old tradition tailored only for men in the Japanese Judo world. In Japan the number of female judoka had rapidly increased since 1990’s, and younger generation of female athletes started to feel that such irrational internal rules and traditions were totally incompatible for them. This sense of incompatibility of the internal rules of Judo world is thought to be the origin of the incident.}, pages = {55--77}, title = {日本女子柔道代表選手たちの提起した「暴力問題」の内容と本質 : 部分社会論の視点から (論文名のみ掲載)}, volume = {11}, year = {2018}, yomi = {フジワラ, ヨウスケ} }