Deutsch  Français  Nederlands 

- [Eiji Kunmo Zukai or Ei Kuno Zukai depending on the transcriber].

 1540193353,
Kyoto, Ogawa Kinsuke 1871 (Meiji 4). 225x155mm publisher's wrapper with title label; woodblock illustrations throughout. Some worming and a marginal stain, neat repairs to the first few margins. A very decent copy with its colour illustrated outer wrapper, this smudged and rumpled but complete and untorn. ¶ A rare and most appealing illustrated introduction to English. To an extent unseen in any other non-western culture faced with the colonial ambitions of the west the Japanese controlled their own re-education. They were not showered with unwanted primers by missionaries and other pious businessmen. They produced, printed and determinedly digested their own, using whatever sources they could find, the occasional hired expert and their imagination. The more I look at books like these, which were assiduously studied, the more I wonder how anyone learnt any English. How many Japanese went to their graves calling a camera a desk and hoping for an opportunity to introduce 'pluckant' into conversation? Leaving aside errors, books like these make no sense as tools to me but tens, hundreds of thousands of Japanese students set out with these as guides on the road of bunmei kaika - government sponsored enlightenment and civilization - and got there way faster than anyone should have. In fact the more I think about it the more I wonder how anyone learns any language.
AUD 750.00 [Appr.: EURO 451.5 US$ 479.81 | £UK 386.75 | JP¥ 74009] Book number 9673

is offered by:


Richard Neylon, Bookseller
21 Story Street, 7215, St Marys, Tasmania, Australia Tel.: 0432 468 145 [international]+61 432 468 145
Email: books@richardneylon.com
Member of ILAB 




  Order this book

Ask for information

Back to your search results