Difference between revisions of "Donald Keene"
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'''Donald Keene''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1942|42]] [[MA]] '[[1947|47]] [[PhD]] '[[1951|51]] is [[University Professor]] Emeritus and Shincho Professor Emeritus of Japanese Literature. At Columbia, he studied under [[Mark Van Doren]], whose philosophy of engagement with primary literary texts shaped Keene's approach to Japanese literature. He has taught Japanese literature and culture for over fifty years, and is a celebrity in Japan, where his memoirs were recently serialized in the country's highest-circulation newspaper. In [[1986]], the [[Donald Keene Center of Japanese Culture]] was founded in his honor. | '''Donald Keene''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1942|42]] [[MA]] '[[1947|47]] [[PhD]] '[[1951|51]] is [[University Professor]] Emeritus and Shincho Professor Emeritus of Japanese Literature. At Columbia, he studied under [[Mark Van Doren]], whose philosophy of engagement with primary literary texts shaped Keene's approach to Japanese literature. He has taught Japanese literature and culture for over fifty years, and is a celebrity in Japan, where his memoirs were recently serialized in the country's highest-circulation newspaper. In [[1986]], the [[Donald Keene Center of Japanese Culture]] was founded in his honor. | ||
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+ | In [[2012]], Keene's popularity in Japan culminated when he became one of the few Westerners ever granted Japanese citizenship. A museum will even be built in his honor containing a replica of his study in New York.<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/03/world/asia/with-citizenship-japan-embraces-columbia-scholar.html?ref=global-home</ref> | ||
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+ | ==References== | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Keene]] | [[Category:Columbia College alumni|Keene]] |
Revision as of 22:55, 2 November 2012
- See also Wikipedia's article about "Donald Keene".
Donald Keene CC '42 MA '47 PhD '51 is University Professor Emeritus and Shincho Professor Emeritus of Japanese Literature. At Columbia, he studied under Mark Van Doren, whose philosophy of engagement with primary literary texts shaped Keene's approach to Japanese literature. He has taught Japanese literature and culture for over fifty years, and is a celebrity in Japan, where his memoirs were recently serialized in the country's highest-circulation newspaper. In 1986, the Donald Keene Center of Japanese Culture was founded in his honor.
In 2012, Keene's popularity in Japan culminated when he became one of the few Westerners ever granted Japanese citizenship. A museum will even be built in his honor containing a replica of his study in New York.[1]