龍谷大学図書館

東アジアの本草学・博物学に向かう視線 : 南方熊楠・スウィングル・田中長三郎の交流を中心として

松居, 竜五; 蔡, 平里, 2021.06.30. <TD32149043>
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書誌詳細

コミュニティコード 紀要論文
コレクションコード 龍谷大学国際社会文化研究所紀要
コレクションコード 第23号
タイトル 東アジアの本草学・博物学に向かう視線 : 南方熊楠・スウィングル・田中長三郎の交流を中心として
言語 jpn
タイトル(その他) Sharing the Spirit of Traditional Eastern Natural History : On the Academic Exchange among Minakata Kumagusu, W. T. Swingle, and Tanaka Tyōzaburō
作成者 松居, 竜五
作成者 蔡, 平里
公開者 龍谷大学国際社会文化研究所
NCID AA11872617
JaLCDOI info:doi/10.50873/9099
雑誌名 龍谷大学国際社会文化研究所紀要
23
開始ページ 57
終了ページ 75
発行日 2021.06.30
寄与者 MATSUI, Ryugo
寄与者 Tsai, Ping li
寄与者 マツイ, リュウゴ
登録日 2021.09.28
資料種別(NIIタイプ) 紀要論文
URI(アイテム表示画面) http://hdl.handle.net/10519/9099
著者版フラグ publisher
SORTKEY 004
ISSN(NII) 18800807
アブストラクト Minakata Kumagusu(1867-1941)and W. T. Swingle(1871-1952)started their correspondence between Tanabe in Wakayama Prefecture and Washington DC in 1906. Swingle, asking Kumagusu for the knowledge of traditional natural history in China and Japan, even tried to invite him to Washington to work together as a researcher of the Library of Congress. Although Kumagusu was interested in this offer, he could not leave for the US for he was in the middle of his protest against the destruction of natural environment by the government. Then, in 1915, when Swingle visited Japan, he went down to Tanabe to see Kumagusu. A young botanist called Tanaka Tyōzaburō(1885-1976 accompanied Swingle. Tanaka later went to Washington as if he were the substitute to Kumagusu, and worked with Swingle. Tanaka was also very impressed by the large erudition of Kumagusu, and launched the project to establish Minakata Botanical Institute as their ideal organization to study interdisciplinary fields concerning the natural history. It needs attention that these three figures shared the interest towards the traditional natural history both in the West and the East. Kumagusu has long endeavored to research on the relation between the description of the folklore as well as botany in the Eastern natural history, for it shows the records of the human perception of the nature. Both Swingle and Tanaka fully understood the significance of this perspective of Kumagusu.