Established in 1974, the Journal of Japanese Studies features original, analytically rigorous articles from across the humanities and social sciences, including comparative and transnational scholarship in which Japan plays a major part

Hedberg 41:2

ABSTRACT

 

WILLIAM C. HEDBERG
Separating the Word and the Way:
Suyama Nantō’s Chūgi Suikodenkai and Edo-Period Vernacular Philology

This study examines Edo-period interest in the Chinese vernacular novel Suikoden (Ch. Shuihu zhuan).  In 1757, Suyama Nantō, a classical scholar from Tosa, published Chūgi Suikodenkai, an annotated guide to the vocabulary of the novel.  Although Nantō’s guide can be connected to a larger discourse on linguistic change established by the classical scholar Ogyū Sorai and his Chinese instructor, Okajima Kanzan, the text ultimately rejects their understanding of Sino-Japanese cultural relations in favor of a paradigm rooted in the collection of discrete information about contemporary Chinese material culture that downplayed the ethical and political applications of such information.

Volume 41, Number 2 (Summer 2015)
© 2015 Society for Japanese Studies