1696 Japanese Woodblock Chinese History Tsuzoku kanso gundan Qing Han War CHINA

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A 17th century Sino-Japanese woodblock print history of the Chu-Han Contention between the Qing and Han Dynasty bound in the fukurotoji style. The Tsuzoku kanso gundan is the tale of the conflict between the chu and han after the Qing Dynasty before Liu Bang united China in 202 BC as the emperor of the Han Dynasty. It was translated into Japanese and in turn helped shape Japanese literature away from the stylized Chinese verse of scholarly attention and began considering the more mundane, as literature as well. This was done by entertaining and educating the natives of Japan about the world, specifically China, who were banned from leaving the mainland during that time period. Pastreich writes,

“Such Chinese historical novels may have appealed to Japanese readers because they covered the details of Chinese history in a lively and accessible manner, going beyond the digested and sanitized description of history to the messy details of state formation by military and political means. The content of the novels were not necessarily more accurate than official history, but they have far greater mimetic detail.”

 

This rare 1696 tale of the Han Chu Conflict is written in the typical column format with furigana and katakana usage for easier reading!

$950.00

In stock

Free shipping wordwide!


Satisfaction Guaranteed

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1696 Japanese Woodblock Chinese History Tsuzoku kanso gundan Qing Han War CHINA

 

A 17th century Sino-Japanese woodblock print history of the Chu-Han Contention between the Qing and Han Dynasty bound in the fukurotoji style. The Tsuzoku kanso gundan is the tale of the conflict between the chu and han after the Qing Dynasty before Liu Bang united China in 202 BC as the emperor of the Han Dynasty. It was translated into Japanese and in turn helped shape Japanese literature away from the stylized Chinese verse of scholarly attention and began considering the more mundane, as literature as well. This was done by entertaining and educating the natives of Japan about the world, specifically China, who were banned from leaving the mainland during that time period. Pastreich writes,

“Such Chinese historical novels may have appealed to Japanese readers because they covered the details of Chinese history in a lively and accessible manner, going beyond the digested and sanitized description of history to the messy details of state formation by military and political means. The content of the novels were not necessarily more accurate than official history, but they have far greater mimetic detail.”

 

This rare 1696 tale of the Han Chu Conflict is written in the typical column format with furigana and katakana usage for easier reading!

 

Item number: #7249

Price: $950

 

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Vernacular Translation of the Military Tale of the Han and Chu. Tsūzoku kanso gundan, 通俗漢楚軍談. つうぞくかんそぐんだん。

 

Japan: Genroku 8 [1696]

 

Details:

  • Collation: Complete with all pages; 14 volumes
  • References:
    • Keio University, Japanese culture through rare books.
    • Emmanuel Pastreich; The Observable Mundane: Vernacular Chinese and the Emergence of A Literary Discourse on Popular Narrative in Edo Japan.
  • Language: Japanese
  • Binding: Softcover; tight & secure
  • Size: ~10.25in X 7.25in (26cm x 18.5cm)

 

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7249

 

Categories

Military & War

Asia, Africa, & Middle Eastern

Authors

Unknown

Printing Date

17th Century

Language

Other

Binding

Softcover

Book Condition

Excellent

Collation

Complete