ログイン
言語:

WEKO3

  • トップ
  • ランキング
To
lat lon distance
To

Field does not validate



インデックスリンク

インデックスツリー

メールアドレスを入力してください。

WEKO

One fine body…

WEKO

One fine body…

アイテム

  1. 国際日本文学研究集会
  2. 国際日本文学研究集会会議録
  3. 第40回

特別講演 知の形態としての日本古典文学

https://doi.org/10.24619/00003307
https://doi.org/10.24619/00003307
162ef555-caeb-4cad-8198-53208fe2be58
名前 / ファイル ライセンス アクション
I4002.pdf 特別講演 知の形態としての日本古典文学 (515.3 kB)
license.icon
Item type 会議発表論文 / Conference Paper(1)
公開日 2017-07-18
タイトル
タイトル 特別講演 知の形態としての日本古典文学
タイトル
タイトル Classical Japanese Literature as a Form of Knowledge
言語 en
言語
言語 jpn
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 翻訳
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 和歌
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 メタ詩
資源タイプ
資源タイプ識別子 http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794
資源タイプ conference paper
ID登録
ID登録 10.24619/00003307
ID登録タイプ JaLC
著者 クリステワ, ツベタナ

× クリステワ, ツベタナ

WEKO 25545

クリステワ, ツベタナ

ja-Kana クリステワ, ツベタナ

Search repository
KRISTEVA, Tzvetana

× KRISTEVA, Tzvetana

WEKO 25546

en KRISTEVA, Tzvetana

Search repository
抄録
内容記述タイプ Abstract
内容記述 Today we use less and we use more of our mental capacity than we did in the past; and it is not exactly the same kind of mental capacity as it was either. For example, we use considerably less of our sensory perceptions.[ …] You cannot develop all the mental capacities belonging to mankind all at once. You can only use a small sector, and this sector is not the same according to the culture. That is all.
Claude Levi-Strauss, Myth and Meaning
(University of Toronto Press, 1978, 18‒19)
Each culture possesses its own unique epistemological methodology, its particular ways of knowing. The shape knowledge takes is different depending on both cultural and historical factors. This conclusion, first articulated by the cultural anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss( 1908 ‒2009) as a means of challenging deeply entrenched Eurocentric interpretation of the world, is generally accepted today. However, in the wake of modern-day academism, knowledge has become compartmentalized into various scholastic fields, such that these separate fields, tightly circumscribed as they are, rarely permit investigations of an interdisciplinary sort. Consequently, classical Japanese literature is usually considered in the light of the role literature plays in modern society, i.e. its role in ancient and medieval Japanese society is expressed in terms of modernday intellectual trends.
It goes without saying that each and every culture develops some form or other of metaphysical speculation. However, pre-modern Japan did not see the rise of such prolific philosophers as, say, Socrates, Plato, Confucius, or Laozi. Instead of philosophers, Japanese culture has left us with immortalized poets whose treatises on the art of poetics comprise the oldest form of theoretical discourse in the archipelago. What is the significance of this?
In this presentation I will attempt to analyze the process whereby classical Chinese philosophical thought was adapted into a new form of poetic thought within Japan. I shall focus my attention on the Heian period ― that age wherein a unique Japanese culture was first developed ― and show through specific examples how classical Japanese poetry waka functioned as a media for the reception and deconstruction of classical Chinese philosophy. Having ascertained the role of waka poetry per se and the Heian lyrical prose based on it as a unique form of the development of intellectual thought in Japan, I shall compare some of its basic ideas with the philosophical essence of the revolutionary developments in modern natural sciences.
書誌情報 国際日本文学研究集会会議録
en : PROCEEDINGS OF INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON JAPANESE LITERATURE

号 40, p. 42-15, 発行日 2017-03-24
出版者
出版者 国文学研究資料館
ISSN
収録物識別子タイプ ISSN
収録物識別子 0387-7280
フォーマット
内容記述タイプ Other
内容記述 pdf
戻る
0
views
See details
Views

Versions

Ver.1 2023-05-15 15:12:45.087486
Show All versions

Share

Mendeley Twitter Facebook Print Addthis

Cite as

エクスポート

OAI-PMH
  • OAI-PMH JPCOAR 2.0
  • OAI-PMH JPCOAR 1.0
  • OAI-PMH DublinCore
  • OAI-PMH DDI
Other Formats
  • JSON
  • BIBTEX

Confirm


Powered by WEKO3


Powered by WEKO3