Nenozo Utsurikawaa

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Nenozo Utsurikawaa
File:Utsurikawaa, Nenozo.jpg
Born 1884
Died 1947
Residence 53 Upper Bedford Place; The Taiwan Imperial University, Taiwan, Japan [A63]
Occupation ethnologist
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow
left 1929 last listed
elected_AI 1926.07.13




Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1926.06.22 nominated; proposed by E.N. Fallaize, seconded by H.J.E. Peake

Notes From Elsewhere

When he was a teenager, he moved to the United States to attend high school. He graduated from the University of Chicago in 1914 and received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1917, both of which majored in anthropology. In 1919, he was a lecturer in the liberal arts at Keio University. In 1921, he was a professor and pre-professor professor of business at the Tokyo University of Commerce. Later, he was transferred to the Taipei Governor's Office of the Taipei Higher Education Institute. He once worked as a foreign researcher and went to Europe and the United States to study for 1 year and 10 months. In 1928, the Taipei Imperial University was established. He was appointed as a professor and a member of the Faculty of Arts and Culture. He founded a lecture on folklore, ethnology, research, and specimens. He is engaged in Taiwan Aboriginal Studies and the collection of ethnic artifacts in the Pacific South Island.
In the summer of 1937, he went to the Hague Archives in the Netherlands to film 25,000 photos of Taiwan's Hoji period. After bringing it back, he compiled and compiled about 200 pieces of Taiwanese historical materials and compiled a catalogue. Later, an expert was hired to copy a part of the book, which was divided into twenty-four volumes called "OL Compagnie (Kamer Amsterdam Overgekomene Papieren)".

In 1940, he was promoted to the Minister of Literature and Politics of Imperial University of Taipei. In 1943, he served as the director of the Southern Institute of Humanities. After returning to Japan after the war, he was entrusted to work on the cultural aspects related to the US military stationed in Japan. He died of acute pneumonia in 1947 at the age of 64.

The collection of Shigawako is focused on the comparative study of ethnic cultures in the Pacific and the history of cultural exchanges in the Pacific Rim, leaving outstanding research results and winning the Imperial Academy of Japan. His course at the Imperial College in Taipei was the gateway to Taiwan's anthropology. He has presided over the excavation of cultural sites such as the "Chicken River", "Tainan Head Society" and "Kamaran" (Ilan County) in Keelung.

Publications

External Publications

"The Words of Natural People" (1929)
"Taiwan's local customs. Races (1930)
"The Hongtouyu ヤミ と と と と と と と と と と と と と と と. Word of mouth inheritance and facts" (1931)
"Responsible for the contract of the contract of the land of Tonglu, Tonglu, Guanli Puli, the three matures" (1932)
"Study on the Dependence of Taiwan's Gaosha System" (1935): Shigawako's Collection, Miyamoto Yanren, and Ma Yuandong
"The Ancient and Modern Poetry of the People's Fans" (1936)
"Tai Ba Yi Society Fan House" (1936)
"The Tomb of the Ryukyu People" (1936)
The Remains of the Stone Age of Kenting (1936)
"The concept of not opening a society when you are in a state" (1936)
"The Measurement and Measurement of the High Sands and the Price Quotas, etc." (1942)
"Nanyang に ける ける ける の Movement"

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Membership correspondence: Horinonchi, K.

Other Material