- Torii Ryūzō
nihongo|Ryūzō Torii|鳥居 龍藏|Torii Ryūzō|
April 4 ,1870 -January 14 ,1953 was a Japaneseethnologist , anthropologist andfolklorist . He was known for his anthropological investigation inTaiwan and also conductedarchaeological excavations and attempted to understandprehistoric Northeast Asia.Life
Born in the Funaba quarter of
Tokushima on the island ofShikoku , from an early age he was a passionate collector of artifacts of all kinds, and showed little inclination for formal study. Fortunately, he benefited from intelligent teachers who, despite his indifference to schooling, appreciated his lively natural curiosity, and took him with them on excursions throughout the district to study the history and material culture of his area. He thus developed a precocious ability with field studies that compensated for his lack of dedication to pure book study ["Torii Ryūzō Zenshū", Asahi Shinbunsha, Tokyo 1975 vol.1 pp.1-12]In the wake of
Yoshino Sakuzō 's criticism of Japan's Imperial ambitions inKorea , Torii lined himself up with those who justified Japanese annexation on the grounds that the contemporary consensus worldwide inlinguistics ,anthropology , and archaeology was that the Korean and Japanese people were one and the same 'race/people' ("dōminzoku") [Oguma Eiji, "Tan'itsu minzoku shinwa no kigen", Shin'yōsha, Tokyo 1995 pp.154ff.]ee also
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Kanori Ino References
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