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This book is a selection of graded Japanese readings written in
modern Japanese. An excellent way to learn Japanese, A Japanese
Reader is designed for the foreign student of Japanese who is
interested in attaining and developing proficiency in reading
Japanese, the style of which is in current use in books, magazines,
and newspapers in Japan. It also includes authentic excerpts from
works by 20th-century Japanese masters Mishima, Akutagawa,
Kawabata, and others. Although A Japanese Reader supposes some
acquaintance with the spoken Japanese language, it does not assume
any knowledge of written Japanese and starts from and very
beginning, advancing in graded readings up through quite difficult
materials. Learning the modern Japanese written language is by no
means a difficult task for the student of the Japanese language as
it is often made to appear. The most important thing in such a
study is to get yourself started in the correct direction--after
that, the progress you make and the eventual proficiency you will
gain in reading (and writing) the language are limited only by the
amount of time and effort you are able or willing to devote to the
task. Attention has been given throughout the volume to grading
materials in the order of progressive difficulty, though in many
cases familiarity on the part of a student with the subject matter
involved may well make a particular selection somewhat easier for
him than others further on in the book. Partly to assist in the
understanding of the reading selections and partly because it is
felt that few students will wish to become proficient in reading
Japanese and still remain uninterested in Japanese culture and
cultural history, an attempt has also been made to indicate where
possible significant collateral readings available in English,
especially for some of the sections which deal with distinctive
aspects of Japanese life and culture. Lessons 1 through 17 deal
with the essentials of the Japanese writing system, as it is used
in Japan today. Lessons 18 through 30 deal with building a working
knowledge of Japanese grammar and introducing the Japanese system
of writing. Lessons 31 through 38 are selections of intermediate
difficulty and largely deal with Japanese life and customs.
Included are readings of Japanese literature, archaeology, ceramic
art, painting, Buddhism, the theater, and political science and
philosophy. Lessons 48 through 59 are of increasing difficulty and
include criticisms, resumes, a short text from Meiji and Taisho
literature, and excerpts from important Japanese novels. Lessons 60
through 75 are of advanced difficulty and provided further readings
with a considerable variety of content including Sinology, Zen
Buddhism, Shinto, Christianity, newspapers, economics and finance,
and Japanese government policies.
The WAC Journal is a national peer-reviewed journal on writing
across the curriculum. Published by Clemson University, Parlor
Press, and the WAC Clearinghouse, THE WAC JOURNAL is an annual
collection of articles by educators about their WAC ideas and WAC
experiences. It is a journal of practical ideas and pertinent
theory. CONTENTS of VOLUME 24 (2013): ARTICLES: "Evolutionary
Metaphors for Understanding WAC/WID" by Laura Brady "Connecting WID
and the Writing Center: Tools for Collaboration" by Heather M.
Robinson and Jonathan Hall "WAC/WID Meets CXC/CID: A Dialog between
Writing Studies and Communication Studies" by Denise Ann Vrchota
and David R. Russell "Multidisciplinarity and the Tablet: A Study
of Writing Practices" by Jennifer Ahern-Dodson and Denise K. Comer
INTERVIEW: "Committed to WAC: Christopher Thaiss" Interviewed by
Carol Rutz "Conversations in Process: An Observational Report on
WAC in China" by Martha A. Townsend and Terry Myers Zawacki REVIEW:
"Introducing Writing Across the Curriculum into China: Feasibility
and Adaptation" by Dan Wu, Reviewed by Mya Poe Contributors
The WAC Journal is a national peer-reviewed journal on writing
across the curriculum. Published by Clemson University and Parlor
Press, The WAC Journal is an annual collection of articles by
educators about their WAC ideas and WAC experiences. It is a
journal of practical ideas and pertinent theory. - Contents of
VOLUME 23 (2012): ARTICLES: "Changing Research Practices and
Access: The Research Exchange Index" by Jenn Fishman & Joan
Mullin - "Crossing the Measurement and Writing Assessment Divide:
The Practical Implications of Inter-Rater Reliability in Faculty
Development" by Jennifer Good - "Articulating Claims and Presenting
Evidence: A Study of Twelve Student Writers, From First-Year
Composition to Writing Across the Curriculum" by J. Paul Johnson
& Ethan Krase - "From High School to College: Developing
Writing Skills in the Disciplines" by Virginia Crank - "Spectators
at Their Own Future: Creative Writing Assignments in the
Disciplines and the Fostering of Critical Thinking" by Alexandria
Peary - INTERVIEW: "Joe Harris: Teaching Writing Via the Liberal
Arts" by Carol Rutz - REVIEW: Writing in Knowledge Societies,
edited by Doreen Starke-Meyerring, Anthony Par, Natasha Artemeva,
Miriam Horne, and Larissa Yousoubova; reviewed by Mya Poe -
Contributors - Subscribe to The WAC Journal
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
The Japanese language is often under attack by linguists,
translators and even amateurs for having a seemingly vague set of
rules, making it near impossible to ever fully grasp all of the
language's facets. Roy Andrew Miller guides the reader through
these often contradictory allegations by evaluating Japanese in the
light of linguistic science. He also pays particular attention to
the problems inherent in certain systems for describing the
language, and to questions posed by published translations from
Japanese literature.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
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