Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- To the instructors
- Part I Preliminaries
- Part II Principles
- Part III Selected readings
- 7 Prelude: on reading different genres of contemporary Japanese texts
- 8 Reading Japanese texts
- 9 Tanka and essay R1: from Yotsuba no Essei (“The Four-leaf Essay”) by Machi Tawara
- 10 Narrative R2: Ari to Kirigirisu (“The Ant and the Grasshopper”) from Mirai isoppu (“Future Aesop's Fables”) by Shin'ichi Hoshi
- 11 Newspaper opinion column R3: Kootsuu Anzen Sofuto (“The ‘Soft’-ware for Traffic Safety”) from Asahi Shimbu
- 12 Magazine advertisement R4: Pro-Keds shoes advertisement from Popeye, a young men's magazine 204
- 13 Comic R5: from Kureyon Shinchan
- 14 Newspaper essay: R6: Tensei Jingo from Asahi Shimbun
- 15 Essay R7: Sabaku e no Tabi (“Traveling to the Desert”) by Tetsuroo Morimoto
- Part IV Appendices
- References
- Index
15 - Essay R7: Sabaku e no Tabi (“Traveling to the Desert”) by Tetsuroo Morimoto
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- To the instructors
- Part I Preliminaries
- Part II Principles
- Part III Selected readings
- 7 Prelude: on reading different genres of contemporary Japanese texts
- 8 Reading Japanese texts
- 9 Tanka and essay R1: from Yotsuba no Essei (“The Four-leaf Essay”) by Machi Tawara
- 10 Narrative R2: Ari to Kirigirisu (“The Ant and the Grasshopper”) from Mirai isoppu (“Future Aesop's Fables”) by Shin'ichi Hoshi
- 11 Newspaper opinion column R3: Kootsuu Anzen Sofuto (“The ‘Soft’-ware for Traffic Safety”) from Asahi Shimbu
- 12 Magazine advertisement R4: Pro-Keds shoes advertisement from Popeye, a young men's magazine 204
- 13 Comic R5: from Kureyon Shinchan
- 14 Newspaper essay: R6: Tensei Jingo from Asahi Shimbun
- 15 Essay R7: Sabaku e no Tabi (“Traveling to the Desert”) by Tetsuroo Morimoto
- Part IV Appendices
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
R7 is a sample of a modern Japanese essay written by Tetsuroo Morimoto, a scholar and essayist. He has written extensively on the philosophy of traveling. The piece we read as R7 was published in his book titled Subarashiki Tabi – Ningen, Saigetsu, Deal “The Wonderment of Travel – Human Beings, Passing Time and Chance Encounter” in 1976 (Tokyo: Daiamondosha). Although students of Japanese will find many new vocabulary items, this essay, in its entirety, can be read with a basic gram – matical background combined with the discourse knowledge gained by studying this book.
Since the essay is divided into five sections as shown in the original text in Appendix 1 – (1) danraku A, (2) danraku B to F, (3) danraku G to L, (4) danraku M to U, and finally (5) danraku V to Z – the reader may read each section separately. This strategy may help the reader not to be overwhelmed by the number of new vocabulary items.
Pre-reading tasks
Do you like to travel? Why do you travel? Why don't you travel? How do you decide where to go? List Japanese words you need in order to answer these questions.
What images and impressions do you have about the desert? The Mohave? The Sahara? Describe your images in Japanese in a memo format.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Principles of Japanese DiscourseA Handbook, pp. 232 - 258Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998