[Library Network]“THE TETSUGAKU KENKYU” is available on KURENAI (since 1916, over 600 volumes)

 On 2022-05-24 (5239 reads)

The Journal of Philosophical Studies : The Tetsugaku Kenkyu, the official journal of The Kyoto Philosophical Society, is now available on Kyoto University Research Information Repository (KURENAI).

The Journal of Philosophical Studies : The Tetsugaku Kenkyu
http://hdl.handle.net/2433/269265

The Tetsugaku Kenkyu was first published in 1916, and is one of the most long-established academic philosophical journals in Japan. Nishida Kitarō, Tomonaga Sanjūrō and other faculty member from the pioneer days of the Department of Philosophy, the College of Letters of Kyoto Imperial University were involved in the launch. Over 600 volumes from the first issue (April 1916) are now available on KURENAI, and newer issues will be added with a 1-year delay. We hope this will be helpful for lots of researchers in this area.

[Academic Support Section, Kyoto University Library]

 

The NDL's Digitized Contents Transmission Service for Individuals to Launch

 On 2022-05-19 (3234 reads)

The National Diet Library, Japan, (the NDL) launched a Digitized Contents Transmission Service for Individuals.

The Service is available to official registered users of the NDL.

For detail:
 

[Library Network] Kyoto University Rare Materials Digital Archive: Important Cultural Property "Dainihonshi hensan kiroku" vol.15-20 (G.S. Letters) newly released

 On 2022-05-17 (2502 reads)

The Graduate School of Letters of Kyoto University and the Kyoto University Museum have been carrying out the restoration and digitization of an important cultural property Dainihonshi hensan kiroku held by the Graduate School of Letters since academic year 2017. Three hundred twenty-two images of the restored volumes 15-20 are now available in Kyoto University Rare Materials Digital Archive.

Dainihonshi hensan kiroku

▼Important Cultural Property - Dainihonshi hensan kiroku (G.S. Letters)
 

Dainihonshi hensan kiroku (大日本史編纂記録) is a collection of more than 6,000 letters (copies) exchanged between Shokokan (彰考館; Mito Domain’s office for history compilation) in Mito (currently in Ibaraki Prefecture) and Edo (currently Tokyo) and their Kyoto office regarding the compilation of Dainihonshi (*1) by Tokugawa Mitsukuni (徳川光圀; 1628-1701). A total of 42,810 people and organizations and 15,159 historical records and literature works are mentioned in the letters and the content covers a wide range of aspects of the time, such as history, literature, Confucianism and Japanese classical literature, as well as the publishing culture during the Genroku Period, which makes this rare material a first-class historical record.

The rare material, before being restored, consisted of 248 volumes of about 10,000 sheets (one sheet folded in half to form a pouch makes two pages) in the form of fukuro-toji yotsume-toji (袋綴四つ目綴装) with sheets of papers folded at the fore edge and sewn at the back edge at four points. However, the rebinding and restoration done to the material during the Edo period were not appropriate to secure its long-term preservation; they also made it impossible to read the majority of the volumes without damaging them, because the text near the back edge was sewn inside the spine. Therefore, a restoration project was launched in academic year 2017 funded by the Sumitomo Foundation, and also funded by government from 2021. The Graduate School of Letters has also set up Kyoto University Fund for the restoration of its library collection and the Kyoto University Museum acquired the university's special budget for this project in 2018.

Each volume of Dainihonshi hensan kiroku is to be released on the Internet through Kyoto University Rare Materials Digital Archive upon the completion of restoration and digitization processes. As of May 17, 2022, the Digital Archive provides 1,872,545 images of 23,250 titles.

 

 

[Library Network] Caution Regarding Predatory Journals (2022 update)

 On 2022-05-16 (5343 reads)

The Kyoto University Library Network has been working to alert and educate KU researchers about the issue of “predatory journals”. And we have published a new leaflet about this issue.

This leaflet contains the latest information on the increasingly complex methods in which predatory journals operate.
Please take a look at it.

"Beware of Predatory Journals"(Kyoto University Library Network, March. 2022.)
   

For more information, please visit the following URL:
https://www.kulib.kyoto-u.ac.jp/content0/1387404?lang=en

2022.05.16 User Support Division, Main Library

 

Service restored -[Maintenance] Kyoto University Rare Materials Digital Archive (May 17)

 On 2022-05-13 (996 reads)

The Maintenance work was completed (2022/05/17 11:50) and the service has been restored.

Kyoto University Rare Materials Digital Archive will suspend its service due to system maintenance for about 2 hours from 10:30am, May 17, 2022.
The service will be restored as soon as the maintenance work has been completed. 
Thank you for your understanding.