ID | 4233 |
フルテキストファイル | |
その他のタイトル(欧) | From the source text of the Isoho monogatari Amakusa translation to a reexamination of the hypothesis of an urtext in classical Japanese
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作成者 | |
Self DOI [info:doi/] | |
掲載誌名 |
和歌山大学クロスカル教育機構研究紀要
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出版者 | 和歌山大学クロスカル教育機構
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ISSN | 24336130
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NCID | AA12815903
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巻 | 2
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開始ページ | 8
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終了ページ | 44
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並び順 | 03
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発行日 | 2021-03-25
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本文言語 |
日本語
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キーワード(和) | 天草本伊曾保
日本大文典
文語祖本説
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キーワード(欧) | Aesopus Dorpii
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抄録(欧) | In this study I elucidate the fact that, through a correspondence among the fables, the Japanese orthography text and the first volume of the Amakusa text were from a Latin or a Spanish edition based on the late 15th-century Steinhöwel edition in Latin and German, and argue that the second volume of the Amakusa edition was based on the so-called Aesopus Dorpii of the first half of the 16th century. In order to do so, I identify correspondences, not only in the titles of fables, but in the use of words and phrases in the text, and also clarify places in several fables in which creative additions were made to the source text. Through this clarification of the source texts for the translation, a reconsideration of the hypothesis positing an urtext in classical Japanese is called for. It has been nearly a century since the promotion of the hypothesis that the Japanese orthography edition and the Amakusa edition were both based on an urtext written in classical Japanese. Here I reexamine the evidence underlying the urtext hypothesis, and analyze the examples from the Fables found in Rodriguez’s Arte da lingoa de Iapam, from which I identify the existence of a double standard in the accepted notion of a four-element classification system, and thus reject the existence of an urtext.
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紀要論文
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出版者版
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