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Oliver H. Statler Papers

 Collection
Identifier: MANUSCRIPT-M00028

Scope and Contents

The Oliver H. Statler Papers reflect the years of travel and the patient accumulation of minute documentation that form the scholarly underpinnings of his writing. The materials include correspondence, research notes, manuscripts, source materials, brochures, clippings, postcards, maps, art prints, photographs, slides, films, and audiotapes.

The archival principles of provenance and original order were strictly maintained in processing the materials to show the creative writing process Statler used to produce his formal writings. As a result, some of the series and subseries are arranged in chronological order and others are alphabetical or by subject.

The papers are organized in the following series: I. Personal, II. Correspondence, III. Literary Works, IV. Art Prints, and V. Audiovisual. These are further subdivided into subseries and in some cases sub-subseries.

The strength of the collection is the extensive research notes and materials Statler collected in preparation for writing. The weakness is the scarcity of materials for Modern Japanese Prints and Japanese Inn, his first two successful literary publications.

Dates

  • Creation: 1881 - 2003

Language of Materials

While English is the primary language of the collection materials, some are in Japanese. Translations accompany many of the Japanese documents.

Conditions Governing Access

Access to the records is unrestricted, except for documents that may be withdrawn for preservation or security reasons.

Biographical / Historical

Born on May 21, 1915, Oliver Hadley Statler was the only child of Mae (Hadley) and Dr. Oliver I. Statler. He grew up in Huntley, Illinois, a small dairy community of about 700 residents located approximately 50 miles northwest of Chicago and 15 miles from Elgin, Illinois. His father served the community as a physician and surgeon for over forty years.

Oliver H. Statler attended public schools in Huntley before graduating from Elgin Academy as an outstanding scholar and leader in his class. He was a member of the Cum Laude Honor Society and won an award for excellence in English, a gold medal for his ability as a debater and another gold medal as a speaker when he graduated from the Academy in 1932. He continued his education at the University of Chicago during the exciting years when Robert M. Hutchins was president. He became active in the Drama Club and participated in the production of plays including one in which George Orwell played the role of Hamlet. In 1936, Oliver received his BA degree from the university and began what was to be a life long relationship with his alma mater.

After graduating, he worked in the Business Department at the University of Chicago as an Assistant to the Bursar from 1937-1941 when he was called into the Army. He was inducted as a member of the Illinois National Guard, 33rd Infantry Division where he was quickly promoted to Master Sergeant and served from 1941-1945.

During World War II, he was stationed in the Pacific including New Guinea and the Philippines but was home on leave when the war ended. He requested return to his unit for duty in the Occupation of Japan but was discharged. The rest of his experiences are best described in Statler's own words:

“Feeling cheated because I had been denied a look at Japan, I took a civil service position with the Army in order to get there. I arrived in Yokohama in April 1947, very ignorant of Japan but at once fascinated by it. I remained with the Army as budget and fiscal administrator until December 1954, living and working in Yokohama and Tokyo. After retiring from the civil service, I remained in Japan for four more years to do research and writing.

"Early in my stay I saw a small exhibition of contemporary Japanese prints, mostly woodblocks. I fell in love with them, came to know many of the artists, and began a collection which now numbers well over a thousand prints and is at the Art Institute of Chicago. My interest in these then quite unknown prints brought an invitation to read a paper on them before the Asiatic Society of Japan in Tokyo in February 1955.

"Our mutual love of Japanese prints had led to a lasting friendship with James A. Michener. Michener recommended to Charles Tuttle that my paper be expanded into a book and the result was my first book, Modern Japanese Prints: An Art Reborn (Tuttle, 1956). Later I did essays for books on individual artists including Koshiro Onchi, Kiyoshi Saito, Shiko Munakata, and Umetaro Azechi, and meanwhile served as art critic for the English-language Asahi Evening News.

"During my first summer in Japan, in 1947, I had fled Yokohama’s heat by visiting the Minaguchi-ya, an inn on the old Tokaido Road between Tokyo and Kyoto. The first visit led to many more, to friendship with the family of the inn, and to learning something of their history. This initial exposure to the history of Japan was fanned by my enthusiasm for the Kabuki theater, many of whose plays are derived from historical incidents.

"The Minaguchi-ya was four centuries old and had always been operated by one continuing family; since it lay on what could be called Japan’s main street, the Tokaido Road, much history passed before its gate and sometimes entered. Michener encouraged me to write the inn’s story, and in 1958 I took home most of the manuscript for Japanese Inn (Random House, 1961), which I dedicated to Michener in acknowledgement of his friendship and help.

"In 1961 I returned to Japan to live for two years at Shimoda, a port opened by Commodore M. C. Perry’s naval expedition of 1853-1854 and the site of the first U.S. Consulate in Japan. Here I wrote the text for The Black Ship Scroll (Weatherhill, 1963), which reproduces an anonymous Japanese artist’s saucy sketches of the Americans. And during this stay I accomplished much of the research for Shimoda Story (Random House, 1969), an account of the Japanese and the first U.S. Consul General and later Minister to Japan, Townsend Harris.

"In 1976 I worked on scripts for the ambitious television series on Japan’s history and culture produced by a consortium called the University of Mid-America. The series was the brainchild of Professor Edwin O. Reischauer, who served as Senior Adviser; it was the backbone of a home-study course but was also intended to be of interest to the general viewer and useful in the classroom.

"I was invited to the University of Hawaii (in Honolulu) as a visiting professor in Asian Studies for the first six months of 1977; I taught a seminar on the Shikoku Pilgrimage. While in Honolulu I decided to move there. I had fond memories of the islands from a few months of training on Kauai during World War II, and Hawaii suits me very well as a place to live and work, being closer to Japan, both physically and culturally, than any other part of the U.S. Since 1977 I have been associated with the University of Hawaii as an Adjunct Professor and a Fellow in Asian Studies and have periodically taught courses in Japanese history.

"My interest in the Pilgrimage to the Eighty-eight Sacred Places of Shikoku dates from my first visit to Shikoku, in 1961. I first performed the 1000-mile circular pilgrimage in 1968. From 1969-1971 I lived on Shikoku in the city of Matsuyama in order to study and perform the pilgrimage, and in 1971 made the entire pilgrimage again. In 1973 I was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship which permitted me to undertake a book about the pilgrimage. Japanese Pilgrimage was published in May 1983 by William Morrow & Company.

"During the Japanese Academic year 1980-81, I was a visiting professor at Kobe College (Kobe Jogakuin), the old and prestigious women’s college now located in Nishinomiya. During this year in Japan I worked with a Matsuyama film maker, Ueda Masakazu, to make an 8-mm film about the pilgrimage; the film was first shown at the 1983 Annual Meeting of the Association for Asian Studies in San Francisco.”

In April 1983, Oliver Statler was invited to spend a month at Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota, where Professor Bardwell Smith asked him to teach the Shikoku Pilgrimage as one segment of his course on the Buddhist tradition. Then he spent the month of May on a book tour promoting Japanese Pilgrimage and traveling across the U.S. to speak to Japan-American societies in New York City, Boston, Washington, D.C., Atlanta, Miami, Palm Beach, Houston, Oklahoma City, St. Louis, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle. In 1983, 1984 and 1985 he led other groups, including University of Hawaii Study Abroad Course students. These tours were described as being “a deeply rewarding experience, physically, mentally, and spiritually” by the participants.

In 1986 Oliver Statler returned to Japan and rented a small apartment a few minutes from the famous Dazaifu Tenman-gu Shrine. Here he began his research for what would be his final unfinished manuscript Dazaifu.

As the reader can tell from Oliver Statler’s description of his accomplishments, he was a modest man. His literary works appeared on bestseller lists and were book-of-the-month club selections. They were translated into both European and Asian languages. He was also a respected art collector who bought not only for himself but selected purchases on behalf of James A. Michener. He helped make modern Japanese print artists known and popular. He also wrote numerous articles, film scripts, plays and lectured. Even though he did not consider himself a scholarly specialist on Japan, many others did. Perhaps the words of James A. Michener said it best: “Oliver Statler knows more about Japan than any other living American and can write about it with great skill, as proved by his international success Japanese Inn

On February 14, 2002 Oliver Hadley Statler passed away. On Thursday, April 18, his ashes were taken out to sea on the ship “Sea Verse” and were scattered off the coast of Waikiki in accordance with his wishes.

See also the obituary column "In Memoriam: Oliver Statler, 1915-2002" by UHM Center for Japanese Studies.

Extent

85.75 Linear Feet

Overview

The Oliver Statler Collection is the accumulated materials that were the basis for the scholarly writings of Oliver Statler, most notably, Japanese Inn, Japanese Pilgrimage, and Shimoda Story. The collection consists of materials that also provide insights into his personal and professional relationships, including correspondence, research notes, manuscripts, source materials, brochures, clippings, postcards, maps, art prints, photographs, slides, films, audiotapes and more.

Other Finding Aids

The Oliver Statler Collection website contains a complete finding aid and box inventory, as well as a table depicting the structure of the collection, select digitized items from the collection, the full text of Statler's unfinished last work ("Dazaifu"), reflective essays by individuals who knew Statler, a bibliography of Statler's work, a list of research projects related to the collection, and information on financial support and processing of the collection.

For a detailed inventory of the collection, including some folder-level and item-level descriptions, see the Box Inventory.

Most website content is duplicated in the ArchivesSpace finding aid, with the exception of the inventory described above and the materials specified in the "Related Materials" and "Existence and Location of Copies" notes (personal essays, digitized items, and "Dazaifu" text).

Background information about the website: The Oliver Statler Papers Fund afforded the opportunity to hire a web designer after the completion of the archival processing in July 2004. However, in October 2004, Hamilton Library suffered catastrophic damage from a disaster referred to as the "Halloween Eve Flash Flood of 2004." Although the disaster delayed the web project for more than one year, Ms. Yoko Kudo, UHM LIS program graduate, joined the project as a web designer in February 2006. Her dedicated work has resulted in this Oliver Statler Collection Website. The Website provides many aspects of the Collection: Statler's biographical sketches; bibliographies; personal essays from Statler's friends; digital resources; and finding aids to help access the collection. Visitors to the website can get a sense of the wealth of information in the Oliver Statler Collection and we hope that many researchers will visit the UH Hamilton Library to uncover his life and works.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Dr. Oliver Statler donated his papers to Hamilton Library in two increments, marked by a 1999 Deed of Gift and a 2002 Trust Bequest. The first accession was received in February 1999 and consisted of manuscript boxes 1–20 as well as gift books to the library. The second increment of personal and manuscript papers in boxes 21–62 along with 109 boxes of books arrived in May 2002 after Dr. Statler’s death.

Existence and Location of Copies

Digital copies of select items are available on the Oliver Statler Collection website

Related Materials

The full text of Statler's unfinished final manuscript, "Dazaifu," can be found on the Oliver Statler Collection website.

The site also includes personal reflections written by individuals who worked with Statler or his papers:

Michael Cooper, Affiliate faculty of Center for Japanese Studies, University of Hawaii at Manoa, and former editor of Monumenta Nipponica: "A Personal Tribute to Oliver Statler"

Patricia Crosby, Executive Editor, University of Hawai'i Press: "Recollections and Reflections"

James Brandon, UHM Dept of Dance and Theatre and a trustee for Oliver Statler: "A Personal Recollection of Oliver Statler"

Patricia Ogburn, Cataloging Department, UHM Libraries, and processing archivist for the Statler Collection: "Archivist's Dream"

Separated Materials

Most books donated by Dr. Statler were not retained as part of the archival collection. Subject specialists determined which would be added to Hamilton Library’s general and special collections. The books were integrated into the East Collection (Japanese language), Asia Collection (Western language including English), and East or Asia Closed shelves. All the books bear Statler’s unique bookplates and can be searched by keyword (“statler and gift”) on the Hawaii Voyager Online Catalog. Lists of the gift books can be viewed on the Oliver Statler Collection website.

Bibliography of Works by and about Oliver Statler

This bibliography can also be viewed at the Oliver Statler Collection website.

Books

1956: Modern Japanese Prints: an Art Reborn. • Rutland, Vt.: Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1956. [NE1310.S63 1956] • Rutland, Vt.: Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1959. [NE1310.S63 1959]

1958: Shiko Munakata, 1st English ed. Rutland, Vt., C. E. Tuttle Co. [NE1325.M8 Y3 1958]

1959: Umetaro Azechi. Tokyo: Toto Shuppan. [NE1325.A92 S7]

1961: Japanese Inn. • New York: Random House, 1961. [TX941.M56 S7] • British ed. London: Secker & Warburg, 1961. [TX941.M56 S7 1961] • Pyramid ed. New York: Pyramid Books, 1962. [TX941.M56 S7 1962] • Paperback ed. New York: Arena Books, 1972. • Paperback ed. Rutland, Vt.: Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1973. • Paperback ed. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1982. [TX941.M56 S7 1982] • Japanese translation. Miura, Shumon, trans. Nippon Rekishi no Yado: Tokaido no Tabibito Monogatari. Tokyo: Jinbutsu Oraisha, Showa 31 [1961]. [DS897.O4 S716 1961] • Japanese translation. George, Saito, trans. Tokaido no Yado: Minaguchiya Monogatari. Tokyo: Shakai Shisosha, Showa 53 [1978]. [DS897.O4 S716 1978] • Spanish translation. Posada Japonica, 1a ed. Barcelona: Luis de Caralt, 1964. [DS897.O4 S718 1964] • German translation. Das Gasthaus am Tokaido. Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1963. • Excerpt. "A Portrait of Hiroshige at an Inn," in Japanese Inn. Tokyo: Gaku Shobo, 1969. • Excerpt. "The Images of Hideyoshi and Iyeyasu who Came Under a Foreigner's Notice," in Japanese Inn. Tokyo: Gaku Shobo, 1969.

1963: The Black Ship Scroll: an Account of the Perry Expedition at Shimoda in 1854 and Lively Beginnings of People-to-People Relations Between Japan and America. • 1st ed. Tokyo: Privately printed for the Japan Societies of San Francisco & New York [by J. Weatherhill], 1963. [DS809 .S783] • 2nd ed. Tokyo: J. Weatherhill, 1964. [DS809 .S783 1964b] • Rutland, Vt.: Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1964.

1969: Shimoda Story. • New York: Random House, 1969. [E183.8.J3 S7] • Rutland, Vt.: Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1971. • Reprint. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1986. [E183.8.J3 S7 1986]

1983: Japanese Pilgrimage. • 1st ed. New York: Morrow, 1983. [BQ6450.J32 S48674 1983] • Reprint. London: Pan, 1984. [BQ6450.J32 S48 1984]

1991: Yagi, Kametaro, and Oliver Statler, ed. Haiku: Messages from Matsuyama. With an introduction by Oliver Statler. Rochester, MI: Katydid Books, Oakland University. [PL729.Y24 1991]

(2002): “Dazaifu” (uncompleted: the full text, with a prefatory note by UHM Library’s Bronwen Solyom, can be viewed on the Oliver Statler Collection website: http://www.hawaii.edu/asiaref/japan/special/statler/dazaifu.htm#text)

Articles and Book Chapters

1955: "Modern Japanese Creative Prints," Monumenta Nipponica 11, no. 2 (July 1955). [DS821.A1 M6]

1957: "Dai Ikkai Kokusai Hanga Biennare-ten (Zadankai)," Geijutsu Shincho 8, no. 8 (August 1957).

1957: "Kiyoshi Saito's Woodblock Prints," in Saito Kiyoshi Hangashu = Kiyoshi Saito. Tokyo: Kodansha. [NE1325.S3 S7 1957]

1958: "The Pioneers of Modern Prints," Japan Magazine 2, no. 2 (Winter 1958). [DS801 .J267]

1958: "Kabuki: An Actor Grows Up," Asia Scene 3, no. 5 (April 1958).

1964: "The Inns are Not All the Same," Life International 37, no. 3 (August 1964).

1965: "Shimoda," This is Japan 12. [DS801 .T47]

1970: "Azechi umetaro no Hito to Sakuhin" ("Stunning beauty: the life and work of Azechi Umetaro"), Ginka 2 (Summer 1970).

1971: "Nippon Kaikokuki ni Okeru Amerikajintachi" ("Americans in the opening of Japan"), Kaiho 26 (January 1971).

1971: "Shimoda Renjo," PHP 5 (February 1971).

1971: "Pilgrim's Path in Buddhist Japan," in Great Religions of the World, ed. National Geographic Book Service. Washington: National Geographic Society, 1971. [BL80.2 .N347]

1971: "Zen's Disciplined Way to Sudden Light," in Great Religions of the World, ed. National Geographic Book Service. Washington: National Geographic Society, 1971. [BL80.2 .N347]

1972: "Aoi Me de Mita Shikoku Henro" ("The Shikoku pilgrimage seen through a foreigner's eyes"), Tabi 4.

1972: "Rokushu Mizufune," Newsletter on Contemporary Japanese Prints 2, no. 1 (February 1972).

1974: "Mizufune Rokushu no Geijutsu" ("The art of Mizufune Rokushu"), Hangwa Geijutsu 7 (Autumn 1974).

1975: "On Writing about Japan for Foreign Readers: the Pilgrimage to the Eighty-Eight Sacred Places of Shikoku," The Matsuyama Shodai Ronshu 25, no. 6 (February 1975). [BQ6450.J32 O45 1975]

1975: "Koyasan," Japanophile 2, no. 1 (Spring 1975).

1975: "Ouchi Koshiro: Thoughts and Second Thoughts," in Prints of Ouchi Koshiro. Tokyo: Keishosha.

1978: "Yoshitoshi Mori - Kanki no Kappazuri" ("Yoshitoshi Mori - Joy in Stencil Prints"), Hangwa Geijutsu 20 (Winter 1978).

1982: Adachi, Barbara C, ed. Recipes from International Tokyo Tables. With a foreword by Oliver Statler. Tokyo: International Ladies Benevolent Society. [TX725.A1 R418 1982]

1983: "Beyond the Barrier Gate," East West 3, no. 11 (Spring 1983). [DU624.7.J3 E17]

1985: "Country Roads and Mountain Temples," Geo 7 (February 1985). [AP2 .G365]

1985: "The Barber and the Brass: Recollections of the 1946 Tokyo Trials," East West 5, no. 3 (Spring 1985). [DU624.7.J3 E17]

1986: "Elegy for an Inn," Winds, the Flight Magazine of Japan Air Lines (May 1986).

1988: Richie, Donald and Tsuguo Yanai. The prints of Marian Korn: a catalogue raisonne. With an introduction by Oliver Statler. New York: Weatherhill/Graphics Editions. [NE2012.K65 A4 1988]

1991: “Shiko Munakata.” The Woodblock and the artist: the life and work of Shiko Munakata. Tokyo; New York: Kodansha International. (Reprint from the original written in 1958) [NE1325 .M8 W6 1991]

Others

1976: "Literature," and "The Performing Arts," in Japan: The Living Tradition. Lincoln: University of Mid-America. (Television program, 30 min. each.)

1977: David and Alfred Smart Gallery. Contemporary Japanese Prints from the Oliver Statler Collection: Exhibition Dates July 13-August 28, 1977. Chicago: The Gallery. [NE1314.C4 D28 1977]

1977: Modern Japanese Prints. Honolulu: East-West Center. [TAPE 1520] (1 sound cassette, 60 min.)

198-?: Ukiyo-e: Prints of Japan. Chicago: The Institute. [VIDOTAPE 2067] (1 videocassette (VHS format), 30min. Scenario and narrative written by Oliver Statler.)

Articles about Statler

1979: "'Aoi Me' no Ohenro-san ga Yuku: Kuruma Junrei o Yokome ni Hantsuki gakari no 'Ikkoku Mairi,'" Mainichi Gurafu 36 (September 1979).

1986: Szymkowiak, Ken. "The Day They Closed the Inn," Intersect Japan 2, no. 1 (January 1986). [BJ1545.P152]

1992: Tokubetsu-ten Kindai Hanga no 12-nin: Kaettekita Sutattora Korekushon kara. Yoseido Refurekushon Gyarari.

2002: Jenkins, Donald. "Oliver Hadley Statler (1915-2002)," Impression: Official Publication of the Ukiyo-e Society of America (November 24, 2002). [NE1310.I67]

Research Projects Related to Oliver Statler and the Statler Papers

Japanese translation by CWAJ. Statler, Oliver. よみがえった芸術ー日本の現代版画 (Modern Japanese Prints: An Art Reborn.) 監修 猿渡紀代子。玲風書房。2009年

Kuwahara, Noriko. "Onchi's Portrait of Hagiwara Sakutaro: Emblem of the Creative Print Movement for American Collectors." New York. Impressions 29 (2007-2008): pp120-139. http://www.japaneseartsoc.org/cover29.html

Kuwahara, Noriko. "Onchi Koshiro's 'Portrait of Hagiwara Sakutaro': Western Collectors of Sosaku Hanga during the Allied Occupation." Tsukuba, Ibaraki.: Bulletin of the Study on Philosophy and History of Art in University of Tsukuba 23 (2006): pp1-26.

桑原規子 「恩地幸四郎の≫をめぐって-占領期における欧米人コレクターと創作版画-」『日本近代版画の海外紹介とその国際的評価に関する研究-昭和初期から占領期まで』 課題番号17520089.平成17-19年度科学研究費補助金基礎研究(C)研究成果報告書。2008年5月 14-31頁。

桑原規子 「恩地幸四郎の≪「氷島」の著者・萩原朔太郎像≫をめぐって-占領期における欧米人コレクターと創作版画の国際的評価」『藝叢(筑波大学芸術学研究史)』 23号 2006年 1-26頁

NHK Tokushima on YouTube "Sekai ni Hasshin Shikoku no 'Omotenashi' 世界に発信 四国の「おもてなし」" Dr. David Moreton, Tokushima Bunri University, was features on his Shikoku Henro research. http://youtu.be/hETj7e3IcC8

Financial Support

Financial support from many individuals made it possible to process and manage the Statler Collection. After Statler's death, Dr. James Brandon (UHM Dept of Dance and Theatre, a trustee for Oliver Statler; see Brandon's personal recollection) led fundraising and initiated the Oliver Statler Papers Fund with the UH Foundation. We gratefully acknowledge the following donors:

Anonymous Donor (Misc.), Alexandra Armstrong, CFP, Dr. James R. Brandon, Ms. Frances Bushell, Mr. Dudley Carlson, Ms. Nina Reppun Carney, Dr. Michael J. Cooper, The Freeman Foundation, Mrs. Marilyn J. Gagen, Dr. Rhoda E. A. Hackler, Ms. Margaret K. Johnson, Ms. Amy S. Katoh, Mr. Jerry J. McCoy, Mrs. Toyoko U. McGovern, Ms. Laurie Meech, Mr. Darin K. Mijo, Dr. Edward J. Quinlan, Jr., Ms. Patricia A. Salmon, Ms. Gayle S. Tasaka, Ms. Molly G. Tubbs

There are additional financial needs and we would greatly appreciate the public's continued support to digitize the Oliver Statler Collection. If you can assist, please contact or send your contributions to:

Oliver Statler Papers Fund (project #123-8940-4), University of Hawai‘i Foundation P.O. Box 11270 Honolulu, HI 96828-0270

Processing Information

The Oliver Statler Collection was managed by Tokiko Y. Bazzell, Japan Studies Librarian, and by staff at the UHM Library Asia Collection Department until the Collection was relocated to the UHM Archives & Manuscripts Department.

In September 2003, Ms. Patricia Ogburn, certified archivist, was hired to organize the collection. In early December 2003, Rena Nishikawa, a student assistant with Japanese language skills, was hired to assist in arranging and transliterating Japanese-language materials. Ogburn worked closely with Lynn Davis, Head of the UHM Library Preservation Department, to properly preserve the collection materials (see Ogburn's recollection). The archival process was completed in July 2004, however, Ogburn kindly provides her professional expertise when questions arise and her dedication is greatly appreciated.

The original order of the papers was maintained throughout the series arrangement to reflect Statler’s intellectual order. Papers were removed from nonarchival file units and refoldered into acid-free alkaline folders and document boxes. The finding aid describes the collection down to folder level. The papers offer a wealth of primary and secondary materials for both historical and biographical research to scholars and students. Except for some preservation photocopying and special treatment required for photographs and art prints, the processing was completed in July 2004.

Reviewing and processing the more than 100 boxes of books also donated by Statler was completed in July 2006 with help from Dr. Yoko Kurokawa (see "Separated Materials" note). Without Kurokawa's 300 hours of volunteer work, it would have been extremely difficult to process this great number of books.

The acceptance and processing of the Statler Collection was made possible through the generosity and kindness of many individuals and organizations. Dr. Sharon Minichiello (UHM Dept of History, then Director of the Center for Japanese Studies) spent much time and energy bringing the collection to the University of Hawaii. John Haak (former University Librarian) supported the deposit of the collection at Hamilton Library, and Bronwen Solyom (former Library Development Officer) coordinated the transfer of the collection. Dr. Michael Cooper (affiliate professor with CJS and former editor with Monumenta Nipponica) has been a valuable consultant on the scholarly content of the collection (see Cooper's recollection).

Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the University of Hawaii at Manoa Libraries Repository

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