A History of Writing in Japan

Przednia okładka
University of Hawaii Press, 1 kwi 2000 - 264
This book deals chronologically with the history of writing in Japan, a subject which spans a period of 2,000 years, beginning with the transmission of writing from China in about the first or second century AD, and concluding with the use of written Japanese with computers. Topics dealt with include the adoption of Chinese writing and its subsequent adaptation in Japan, forms of writing employed in works such as the "Kojiki" and "Man'yoshu," development of the "kana" syllabaries, evolution of mixed character-"kana" orthography, historical "kana" usage, the rise of literacy during the Edo period, and the main changes that have taken place in written Japanese in the modern period (ca. 1868 onwards). This is the first full-length work in a European language to provide the Western reader with an overall account of the subject concerned, based on extensive examination of both primary and secondary materials.
 

Spis treści

Preface
7
List of Abbreviations XV
9
The God Age Script Accounts in The Earliest Histories
9
Writing in Early Japan Inscriptions in Metal and Stone
16
Writing in Eighth Century Japan
40
80
49
Development of The Kana Syllabaries
59
The Contrasting Functions of Phonograms of The Kataka
75
Evolution of Texts Written in Mixed CharacterKana
90
PreModern Kana Usage
104
Aspects of Writing from The Kamakura Period to
126
Development of The Modern Japanese Script
136
Select Glossary
188
Bibliography
210
Index
230
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