What is This, Please?
|Can any kind soul please tell me the title and/or author of this book? Any supplemental information about it would be appreciated as well. It’s a Japanese paperback that appears to date from 1936. This particular copy was printed during or before 1944. It appears to be some sort of historical or philosophical non-fiction text.
7 Comments
Add a Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.
It is still using older version of kanji that have since become archaic in modern Japanese. Notable the kuni is ??as opposed to the now standardized ?.
I’ll take a stab at translating the title.
The first characters ?? mean country-wide or national. The second set ?? mean youth. The third set, and this is the one that took a little bit to look-up, is ??. This one, I am going to have to guess at that meaning. The first kanji, ??means hot or passionate. The second kanji, ? mean competition or contest. My guess is both together could mean something like “the fiery content” or “tournament” there is some leeway since a direct translation doesn’t make much sense. The last kanji ? literally means to gather or to collect, but in this context its just referring to a collection of stories.
So altogether, I would say the title of the book is a “Fiery tales of youth from the national tournament.” Yeah, not really the best translation, but that’s pretty much it. I will say this, I would imagine the old kanji was purposefully used to give it a more “ancient tales of Greece” feel.
As far as how to pronounce the title. I’d go with Zenkoku Seinen Nebben (I’m guessing, since this word was not in any dictionary I checked) Shuu.
That’s all for today’s kanji translation class.
AWWWW, just realized it doesn’t recognize Chinese characters in this wordpress…sad panda.
If OCR and machine translation were better, I could help you, but it’s just a lot of noise and little good output.
The characters read (in “modern” simplified kanji):
??????????
(The third oratorical championship)
???????
(National youth speech collection)
?????????
(With comments by the judges)
?????????
(Appendix to “Juuben” July special issue)
?????????????
(Printed and delivered June 5, 1936)
???????????
(Published July 1, 1936)
????? ? ????
(“Juuben” Vol. 2?, Issue 7)
?? (Juuben) seems to be the name of the magazine which literally means oratory.
According to this page
https://kotobank.jp/word/%E9%9B%84%E5%BC%81-402983
the magazine was published by ?????? (Dai-nippon yuuben-kai, Grand Japan Oratory Company) which is the predecessor of ??? (Kodansha).
Eek, this blog doesn’t support kanji?!
It literally means “A compilation of fiery speeches of national youths – with adjudicators’ and teachers’ comments (The third eloquence championship)”
It’s a record of kind of political or ideological speech contest by young people at that time I guess.
Many thanks to everyone for the info.