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Little is known of Dutch author MARINUS WILLEM DE VISSER
(1876-1930) beyond his academic life as a classicist with an
interest in Chinese and Japanese language and culture, and as a
popularizer of Japanese art in the Netherlands. He is best
remembered today for having given us a cornerstone examination of
the legends of fantastic flying reptiles known as dragons. The
Dragon in China and Japan contains "the most interesting quotations
concerning the dragon in China, systematically arranged, selected
from the enormous number of passages on this fantastic animal in
Chinese literature, from the remotest eras down to modern times,"
notes cryptozoologist Loren Coleman in his new introduction.
Coleman also praises the book's use of primary source material. "If
cryptozoologists are to study the Asian dragons of India, China,
and Japan, it must not be done through the screen of today's New
Age mentality. Scholarly, level-headed examinations of living,
breathing reports of serpentine flying beasts, water-borne
megafauna, and shadowy entities must be balanced with
investigations of the legends and folktales of these dragons from
Asian texts," such as de Visser's here. This new edition, a replica
of the 1913 first edition complete with extensive notes in the
original Asian alphabet, is part of Cosimo's Loren Coleman Presents
series. LOREN COLEMAN is author of numerous books of cryptozoology,
including Bigfoot : The True Story of Apes in America and Mothman
and Other Curious Encounters.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1913 Edition.
1913. In the First Book of this volume, the most interesting
quotation concerning the dragon in China are systematically
arranged, selected from the enormous number of passages on this
divine animal found in Chinese literature from the remotest ages
down to modern times. In order to give the original conceptions the
author did not quote the numerous poems on the dragon, because the
latter, although based upon those conceptions, enlarged them in
their own poetical way. The Second Book treats of the dragon in
Japan, considered in the light of the facts given by the
Introduction and Book I.
1913. In the First Book of this volume, the most interesting
quotation concerning the dragon in China are systematically
arranged, selected from the enormous number of passages on this
divine animal found in Chinese literature from the remotest ages
down to modern times. In order to give the original conceptions the
author did not quote the numerous poems on the dragon, because the
latter, although based upon those conceptions, enlarged them in
their own poetical way. The Second Book treats of the dragon in
Japan, considered in the light of the facts given by the
Introduction and Book I.
1913. In the First Book of this volume, the most interesting
quotation concerning the dragon in China are systematically
arranged, selected from the enormous number of passages on this
divine animal found in Chinese literature from the remotest ages
down to modern times. In order to give the original conceptions the
author did not quote the numerous poems on the dragon, because the
latter, although based upon those conceptions, enlarged them in
their own poetical way. The Second Book treats of the dragon in
Japan, considered in the light of the facts given by the
Introduction and Book I.
Little is known of Dutch author MARINUS WILLEM DE VISSER
(1876-1930) beyond his academic life as a classicist with an
interest in Chinese and Japanese language and culture, and as a
popularizer of Japanese art in the Netherlands. He is best
remembered today for having given us a cornerstone examination of
the legends of fantastic flying reptiles known as dragons. The
Dragon in China and Japan contains "the most interesting quotations
concerning the dragon in China, systematically arranged, selected
from the enormous number of passages on this fantastic animal in
Chinese literature, from the remotest eras down to modern times,"
notes cryptozoologist Loren Coleman in his new introduction.
Coleman also praises the book's use of primary source material. "If
cryptozoologists are to study the Asian dragons of India, China,
and Japan, it must not be done through the screen of today's New
Age mentality. Scholarly, level-headed examinations of living,
breathing reports of serpentine flying beasts, water-borne
megafauna, and shadowy entities must be balanced with
investigations of the legends and folktales of these dragons from
Asian texts," such as de Visser's here. This new edition, a replica
of the 1913 first edition complete with extensive notes in the
original Asian alphabet, is part of Cosimo's Loren Coleman Presents
series. LOREN COLEMAN is author of numerous books of cryptozoology,
including Bigfoot : The True Story of Apes in America and Mothman
and Other Curious Encounters.
In the First Book of this volume, the most interesting quotation
concerning the dragon in China are systematically arranged,
selected from the enormous number of passages on this divine animal
found in Chinese literature from the remotest ages down to modern
times. In order to give the original conceptions the author did not
quote the numerous poems on the dragon, because the latter,
although based upon those conceptions, enlarged them in their own
poetical way. The Second Book treats of the dragon in Japan,
considered in the light of the facts given by the Introduction and
Book I.
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