And I think a lot of people develop the assumption that the information they need will be packaged for them like that -- it's hard to make the leap to looking up primary sources, looking at them with a critical eye, gleaning information from them that's sometimes utterly irrelevant to what the original author intended, because the original author had no idea you'd be sitting here in 2010 and trying to find these things out. But it's even harder to realize that there's even a leap to be made.
Which is why I was so fortunate to find a book that answers, quite neatly, "What were working conditions like in silk filatures in Japan, in the early part of the 20th century?" -- but even then, the author isn't trying to answer my question. He's trying to outrage people, and people probably not including me, over 80 years after the book was written and now that sweatshops have more or less moved on to other parts of the world.
It's a very important distinction to make, between the thing you're looking for, and the reason people created the document to begin with
(no subject)
31/3/10 01:52 (UTC)Granted, I did take a small elective paleography class when I was at IUC in Yokohama - a fairly specialty thing, for reading classical Japanese calligraphy. I still can't read old handwriting in English.
But I've never even heard of such a thing as Diplomatic, as this
I think you're absolutely right - that leap is really hard to make. We're told over and over again not to make that assumption that things will be nicely packaged for us. There is no one go-to book on Southern Song dynasty landscape paintings iconography (unless there is...). And I for one have moved past that assumption long ago. But, I don't feel that I've really been equipped with the skills or training to know how to proceed now that that assumption is out the window.
Not that it should all be passive. Of course, I'm not expecting that I should just sit here and receive knowledge... of course, I should be working and trying and exploring on my own. But... well, anyway. I apologize for the long rant. You've caught me right in the middle of struggling with a research paper :)