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REVIEW: Tono Monogatari GN




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taishou*



Joined: 02 Nov 2016
Posts: 129
PostPosted: Tue Mar 09, 2021 3:36 pm Reply with quote
I really want to pick this up. Tales of Tohno is a personal favorite of mine.
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zackdavisson
Industry Insider


Joined: 18 Feb 2013
Posts: 15
PostPosted: Tue Mar 09, 2021 9:32 pm Reply with quote
You should get it! Its great!
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taishou*



Joined: 02 Nov 2016
Posts: 129
PostPosted: Wed Mar 10, 2021 11:06 pm Reply with quote
zackdavisson wrote:
You should get it! Its great!

Pulled the trigger and bought it lol
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shosakukan



Joined: 09 Jan 2014
Posts: 294
PostPosted: Mon Mar 15, 2021 11:26 am Reply with quote
Rebecca Silverman wrote:
in much the same way as how Wilhelm and Jacob Grimm

Speaking of Grimm, when Sasaki Kizen passed away, linguist Kindaichi Kyōsuke said that Sasaki Kizen had been a Grimm of Japan.

Rebecca Silverman wrote:
he in fact prettie'd them up,

In a book about Yanagita Kunio, Professor Tsurumi Tarō has said that probably there had been 'raw' folk tales told by no-name 'plebeians' in Tōno and a young literature buff who attended universities in Tokyo (i.e. Sasaki Kizen) telling the folk tales was already a process of alteration.


Sasaki Kizen attended Tetsugaku-kan, which would later become Tōyō University, and Waseda University.
It is said that a reason why Sasaki Kizen attended Tetsugaku-kan was that he wanted to attend lectures by philosopher Inoue Enryō on yōkai.
Dr Inoue Enryō founded Tetsugaku-kan, and he was famous for his studies on yōkai.


Mishima Yukio enjoyed Tōno Monogatari as a literary work.
Mishima Yukio wrote:
Quote:
 柳田國男氏の「遠野物語」は、明治四十三年に世に出た。日本民俗學の發祥の記念塔ともいふべき名高い名著であるが、私は永年これを文學として讀んできた。殊に何囘よみ返したかわからないのは、その序文である。名文であるのみではなく、氏の若き日の抒情と哀傷がにじんでゐる。魂の故鄕へ人々の心を拉し去る詩的な力にあふれてゐる。
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