Japanese Literature 作者:Alan Tansman 出版社:Oxford University Press 副标题:A Very Short Introduction 出版年:2023-5-15 定价:USD 12.00 装帧:Paperback 丛书:Very Short Introductions ISBN:9780199765256 豆瓣评分 评价人数不足 评价: 写笔记 写书评
じどう is a word meaning “children’s” or “juvenile”, and is often used as a prefix. じどうぶんがく is “juvenile literature”. Note that we also saw another じどう earlier, meaning “automatic”, which was also used as a prefix for many words. But “juvenile literature” makes...
Japanese literature - Meiji Period, Haiku, Tanka: Even after the arrival of Commodore Matthew C. Perry’s U.S. Navy fleet in 1853 and the gradual opening of the country to the West and its influence, there was at first little noticeable effect on Japanes
Japanese literature - Tanka, Haiku, Revitalization: Even the traditional forms, tanka and haiku, though moribund in 1868, took on new life, thanks largely to the efforts of Masaoka Shiki, a distinguished late 19th-century poet in both forms but of even g
The Japanese No (or Noh) drama stands in stark contrast to both the Sanskrit and the Chinese. No plays are very short, virtually plotless, and tragic in mood. Performances of No plays are highly stylized, and they move at an extremely slow pace, often stretching a text of two or three...
3. Literature review The effect of external events on stock markets has been a point of interest in the past. Halme and Niskanen (2001) used event study methods to examine the effect of large scale environmental investment. They observed it having an immediate negative impact on the market, ...
Introduction to languages and literature resources AnaDubnjakovic,PatrickTomlin, inA Practical Guide to Electronic Resources in the Humanities, 2010 Japanese Text Initiative URL:http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/japanese/ Content provider:University of Virginia ...
Kaburaki Kiyokata and Hirezaki Eiho: Illustrations bringing color to modern literature Kaburaki Kiyokata to Hirezaki Eihō: kindai bungaku wo irodoru kuchie - Asahi Tomo’o korekushon Tokyo, 2020, 94. p. 111 ills. in colour. 30cm
Okamoto Kidō was a Japanese dramatist and drama critic who wrote nearly 200 historical Kabuki dramas. While working for the Tokyo newspaper Nichinichi in 1908, Okamoto wrote his first play, Ishin Zengo, for the actor Ichikawa Sadanji II and his Kabuki g
Literature Literatures of the World Bashō Bashō (standing), woodblock print by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, late 19th century. (more) haiku Japanese literature Ask the Chatbot a Question More Actions Also known as: hokku Written and fact-checked by The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica Last...