Ryūsaku Tsunoda

Ryūsaku Tsunoda (角田 柳作, Tsunoda Ryūsaku, 8 September 1877 - 29 November 1964) is known as the "father of Japanese studies" at Columbia University.[1] He was directly responsible for developing the Japanese language and literature collection at Columbia's library.[2] Prominent among the former-students who credit his influence as formative is Donald Keene,[3] who had himself become a later Dean of Japanese studies in the United States.

Ryūsaku Tsunoda
角田 柳作
Ryūsaku Tsunoda in his Columbia University classroom
Born(1877-09-08)September 8, 1877
Gunma prefecture, Japan
DiedNovember 29, 1964(1964-11-29) (aged 87)
Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
OccupationJapanese studies

Biography

Keene's own perspective on Tsunoda was expressed in a lecture given at Waseda University in 1994:

"His vocation was teaching, not writing. His joy as a teacher lay in communicating knowledge directly and enthusiastically to his students. ... As one of his students, I feel it regrettable that Prof. Tsunoda is not known just because he did not publish anything."[4]

Selected works

In an overview of writings by and about Tsunoda, OCLC/WorldCat lists roughly 50 works in 100+2 publications in 4 languages and 2,000+ library holdings.[5]

This list is not finished; you can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
  • Japan in the Chinese Dynastic Histories, 1951 (with L. Carrington Goodrich)
  • Sources of Japanese Tradition, Vols. I-II, 1958 (with William Theodore de Bary and Donald Keene)

Notes

References

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