@book{oai:kansai-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00022570, author = {陶, 徳民 and Tao, Demin}, month = {Mar}, note = {It is often said that the prewar Japanese people embraced an ambivalent attitude toward China, which mixed admiration to ancient China and derogation to contemporary China. My analysis of archives preserved in the Naitō Collection about the Lantinghui (the Orchid Pavilion Gathering held in Kyoto in Spring 1913 for commemorating Wang Xizhi (303-361), the Calligraphical Sage of East Asia who initiated the kind of gathering in 353), and Shina ron (A Treatise on China by Naitō Konan (1866-1934) composed in Fall 1913 for making policy suggestions to Xiong Xiling (1870-1937), the then Prime Minister of the newly established Republic of China with whom Naitō maintained a friendship since 1906), shows that in the year 1913, Naitō proudly looked upon himself both as a servant-student of Wang and as an advisor to Xiong. It is no exaggeration that his attitude represented perfectly the kind of ambivalence shared by the contemporary Japanese people.}, publisher = {関西大学アジア・オープン・リサーチセンター}, title = {王羲之の学僕と熊希齢の顧問を自任した1913年の内藤湖南 : 内藤文庫所蔵一次資料に現れたその中国観の特質}, year = {2022} }