Description

Book Synopsis
For many years it has been known that scholars of Chinese history and culture must keep abreast of scholarship in Japan, but the great majority have found that to be difficult. Japanese for Sinologists is the first textbook dedicated to helping Sinologists learn to read scholarly Japanese writing on China. It includes essays by eminent scholars, vocabulary lists with romanizations, English translations, grammar notes, and a wealth of general information not easily available anywhere. The reader will be introduced to a wide panoply of famed Sinologists and their writing styles. The first chapters introduce some basic information on dictionaries, encyclopedias, and other resources for research on China in Japanese materials, including a list of names and terms from Chinese political, historical, and cultural events. The chapters cover a range of topics and time periods and highlight authors, all well-known Japanese scholars, with an appendix of English translations of all the articles. After completing this book, the user will be able to begin his or her own reading in Japanese Sinology without the extensive apparatus this volume supplies.

Table of Contents
Introduction

1. Translation Tables for Sinologists
a. Chinese Historical Eras
b. Selected Chinese Place Names
c. Historical Proper Nouns (through 1949)

2. Japanese Dictionaries Aimed at Sinologists

3. Oshima Toshikazu, “Qiu Jin”

4. Ono Kazuko, “Introduction: A History of Research on the Donglin Party”

5. Takeuchi Yoshimi, “Issues in Our View of Sun Yat-sen” 67

6. Shimada Kenji, “The Commoner Nature of Culture in the Ming Period”

7. Miyazaki Ichisada, “Was the Jingchu 4 Mirror a Product of the Daifang Commandery?”

8. Yoshikawa Kojiro
a. “Du Fu: A Personal Account”
b. “First Year of the Xiantian Era”

9. Niida Noboru, “Fengjian and Feudalism in Chinese Society” 265

10. Naito Konan, “Cultural Life in Modern China”

Appendix of Translations

Japanese for Sinologists

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    A Paperback / softback by Joshua A. Fogel, Fumiko Joo

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      Publisher: University of California Press
      Publication Date: 18/07/2017
      ISBN13: 9780520284395, 978-0520284395
      ISBN10: 0520284399

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      For many years it has been known that scholars of Chinese history and culture must keep abreast of scholarship in Japan, but the great majority have found that to be difficult. Japanese for Sinologists is the first textbook dedicated to helping Sinologists learn to read scholarly Japanese writing on China. It includes essays by eminent scholars, vocabulary lists with romanizations, English translations, grammar notes, and a wealth of general information not easily available anywhere. The reader will be introduced to a wide panoply of famed Sinologists and their writing styles. The first chapters introduce some basic information on dictionaries, encyclopedias, and other resources for research on China in Japanese materials, including a list of names and terms from Chinese political, historical, and cultural events. The chapters cover a range of topics and time periods and highlight authors, all well-known Japanese scholars, with an appendix of English translations of all the articles. After completing this book, the user will be able to begin his or her own reading in Japanese Sinology without the extensive apparatus this volume supplies.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction

      1. Translation Tables for Sinologists
      a. Chinese Historical Eras
      b. Selected Chinese Place Names
      c. Historical Proper Nouns (through 1949)

      2. Japanese Dictionaries Aimed at Sinologists

      3. Oshima Toshikazu, “Qiu Jin”

      4. Ono Kazuko, “Introduction: A History of Research on the Donglin Party”

      5. Takeuchi Yoshimi, “Issues in Our View of Sun Yat-sen” 67

      6. Shimada Kenji, “The Commoner Nature of Culture in the Ming Period”

      7. Miyazaki Ichisada, “Was the Jingchu 4 Mirror a Product of the Daifang Commandery?”

      8. Yoshikawa Kojiro
      a. “Du Fu: A Personal Account”
      b. “First Year of the Xiantian Era”

      9. Niida Noboru, “Fengjian and Feudalism in Chinese Society” 265

      10. Naito Konan, “Cultural Life in Modern China”

      Appendix of Translations

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