New Books Network

Aaron L. Miller, "Basketball in Japan: Shooting for the Stars" (Routledge, 2024)

Sep 21, 2025
Aaron L. Miller, a Kinesiology Lecturer at California State University, explores basketball's cultural footprint in Japan. He discusses the sport's grassroots popularity among youth versus adult engagement and examines the influence of Samurai culture on coaching styles. Miller reflects on the aspirations of young talents aiming for the NBA, while questioning the definition of 'Japanese' player identity. He also highlights the need for more investment in women's basketball and shares insights from his extensive research into Japanese sporting organizations.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

Fieldwork Began As An English Teacher

  • Aaron Miller learned about Japanese sports while teaching English in a small town and joined local baseball and basketball activities to connect with the community.
  • Those early coaching and attendance experiences sparked his long-term research interest in sport and culture in Japan.
INSIGHT

Ethnography Combined With Historical Reading

  • Miller used ethnography, reading, and historical triangulation to study Japanese basketball over a year of fieldwork at a Tokyo university club called MU.
  • He combined participant observation, interviews, and Japanese/English sources to trace social change through sport.
INSIGHT

Samurai Rhetoric Versus Sports Science

  • At MU coaches clashed between traditional 'commander' samurai-style coaching and modern sports-science approaches focused on player welfare.
  • This tension reflects broader cultural shifts from sacrifice-driven training to evidence-based, health-aware practice.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app