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Speaker: Donald Keene, author of So Lovely a Country Will Never Perish: Wartime Diaries of Japanese Writers (Columbia University Press, 2010) Topic: "Japan, as Revealed Through the Wartime Diaries of Japanese Writers" When: Starting at 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, 01 August 2010 Admission: Buy a copy of So Lovely a Country Will Never Perish from Good Day Books
Donald
Keene received his B.A. (1942), M.A. (1947), and Ph.D. (1949) degrees
from Columbia University, and his Litt. D. from Cambridge University in
1978. He is the recipient of the Kikuchi Kan Prize of the Society for
the Advancement of Japanese Culture (1962); the Order of the Rising
Sun, Second Class (1993) and Third Class (1975); the Japan Foundation
Prize (1983); the Yomiuri Shimbun Prize (1985); the Shincho Grand
Literary Prize (1985); the Tokyo Metropolitan Prize (1987); the Radio
and Television Culture Prize (1993); and the Asahi Prize (1998). He has
received honorary degrees from St. Andrew's College (1990), Middlebury
College (1995), Columbia University (1997, Tohoku University (1997),
Waseda University (1998), Tokyo Gaikokugo Daigaku (1999), and Keiwa
University (2000). He was the first non-Japanese to receive the Yomiuri
Literary Prize for the best book of literary criticism in Japanese
(awarded in 1985 for the original Japanese version of Travellers of a Hundred Ages)
and he was awarded the Nihon Bungaku Taisho (Grand Prize of Japanese
Literature) for the same work. In the autumn of 2002, Professor Keene
was awarded one of Japan's highest honors, the title "Person of
Cultural Merit" (Bunka Koro-sha), for his distinguished service in the promotion of Japanese literature and culture. Established in 1951, the Bunka Koro-sha
award is made annually by the Japanese government to individuals who
have made outstanding contributions to the advancement and development
of Japanese culture. Recipients are provided with a lifetime annual
financial grant. The government announced its sixteen awardees on
October 31, 2002, and the award ceremony took place on November 5, 2002
in Tokyo. Professor Keene is only the third non-Japanese to be
designated an individual of distinguished cultural service by the
Japanese government. Professor Keene began teaching at Columbia
University in 1955, and was named Columbia University Shincho Professor
of Japanese Literature in 1981 and University Professor in 1989; he is
currently a University Professor Emeritus and Shincho Professor
Emeritus. Professor Keene has published approximately 25 books in
English, consisting of studies of Japanese literature and culture,
translations of Japanese works of both classical and modern literature,
and edited works including two anthologies of Japanese literature and
the collection Twenty Plays of the No Theatre. His major
publications include a four-volume history of Japanese literature.
Professor Keene's Japanese publications include approximately 30 books,
some written originally in Japanese, others translated from English.
Professor Donald Keene's Meiji Tenno (Shinchosha, 2001;
translation by Yukio Kakuchi), a biography of the Meiji Emperor,
recently won the 56th Mainichi Shuppan Culture Prize in the humanities
and social sciences division. The Mainichi Shuppan Culture Prize,
established in 1947, is awarded annually by Mainichi Shimbun to one
publication in each of four categories (Literature and Arts; Humanities
and Social Sciences; Natural Sciences; Complete works, Encyclopedias,
etc.) in recognition of their unique contributions to the promotion of
Japanese culture. The award for Professor Keene's book was presented on
November 28, 2002, in Tokyo. The English text, Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852-1912,
was published by Columbia University Press in March, 2002, and, among
its many enthusiastic reviews, was named one of the Best Books of 2002
by the Los Angeles Times Book Review.
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