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Some
Google searches
academic
presentation, methods
of English presentation, presentation
evaluation worksheet
bibliography
of Japonisme, of Modernism,
of Orientalism
Cultural
Studies bibliography
Donald
Rumsfeld burn rate
education
of foreign children (Yukari Himeno is #1 of “about 3,070,000,”
4/18/04)
Edward
Said bibliography, Edward
Said online, Edward
Said in cyberspace
Eliot
and Pound
Ezra
Pound and Japan, and Noh,
and Chinese
Poetry, and the
Orient, and Yeats,
and Yeats
and Eliot
Pound and some texts:
Affirmations,
Certain
Noble Plays of Japan, The
Chinese Written Character as a Medium for Poetry, The
Classical Stage of Japan, Cathay,
Drafts
& Fragments, Guide
to Kulchur, How
I Began, How
to Read, Imagisme,
Des
Imagistes, In
a Station of the Metro, Lustra,
Nishikigi,
Noh
or Accomplishment, Pavannes
and Divisions, Personae,
The
Pisan Cantos, Plays
Modelled on the Noh, Selected
Poems, Selected
Prose, Three
Cantos, The
Translations, Vortex,
Vorticism,
Vou
Club, Women
of Trachis
Introduction
to Orientalism
Japan and some critical terms:
absence,
alterity,
feminist
theory, hybridity,
Modernism,
Orientalism,
otherness,
postcolonial
theory, postmodernism,
subaltern
theory
Japanese
influence in American verse and poetry,
British
verse and poetry,
English
verse and poetry,
English-language
verse and poetry
Japonisme
and Orientalism, and Modernism,
Orientalism
and Modernism
the
legacy of seclusion
Meiji
Japan and the West
multicultural
education in Japan (Ruriko Okada is #2 of “about 141,000,”
4/18/04 )
poem
citation, citing
a poem, how
to cite a poem
reflexive
textuality, reflexivity
and textuality
reproduction
of gender (Mari Sewaki is #3 of “about 575,000,” 4/18/04;
add Japan
and she is #1 of “about 61,900”)
Some other people:
W.
G. Aston, Frank
Brinkley, Basil
Hall Chamberlain, Paul-Louis
Couchoud, S.
Foster Damon, F.
V. Dickins, Ernest
Fenollosa, F.
S. Flint, Sadakichi
Hartmann, Hirata
Kiichi, Ichikawa
Sanki, Kitasono
Katsue, Algernon
Mitford, Miyamori
Asatarô, William
N. Porter, Michel
Revon, George
Sansom
Some other poets and Japan:
Conrad
Aiken, Richard
Aldington, Laurence
Binyon, Edmund
Blunden, Gordon
Bottomley, Witter
Bynner, T.
S. Eliot, Adelaide
Crapsey, William
Empson, Arthur
Davison Ficke, John
Gould Fletcher, G.
S. Fraser, W.
S. Gilbert, Paul
Goodman, W.
E. Henley, Robinson
Jeffers, James
Kirkup, Amy
Lowell, John
Masefield, Joaquin
Miller, Harriet
Monroe, Sturge
Moore, Yone
Noguchi, Alfred
Noyes, William
Plomer, Kenneth
Rexroth, Carl
Sandburg, Wallace
Stevens, Arthur
Waley
Yeats
plays, and Japan,
Yeats
essays, and Japan,
Yeats
and Japan, and Noh,
and the
Orient, and theatre,
and Buddhism,
and Zen
Yeats and some texts:
The
Abbey Theatre, Among
School Children, Art
and Ideas, Autobiographies,
The
Bounty of Sweden, The
Cat and the Moon, Certain
Noble Plays of Japan, Crazy
Jane poems, Deirdre,
The
Dreaming of the Bones, Essays
and Introductions, Explorations,
Fergus
and the Druid, A
Full Moon in March, The
King of the Great Clock Tower, Last
Poems and Two Plays, The
Letters, Meditations
in Time of Civil War, Pages
from a Diary, Per
Amica Silentia Lunae, Plays
for Dancers, Plays
and Controversies, Plays
in Prose and Verse, The
Resurrection, The
Statues, The
Theatre of Beauty, The
Tragic Theatre, A
Vision, Wheels
and Butterflies, The
Winding Stair, Words
for Music Perhaps, The
Words Upon the Window Pane
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