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Serge Elisséeff : ウィキペディア英語版 | Serge Elisséeff
Serge Elisséeff (born Sergei Grigorievich Eliseyev; 13 January 188913 April 1975) was a Russian-French scholar and professor who specialized in Japanese and Chinese.〔Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "''Elisséeff, Serge''" in ; n.b., Louis-Frédéric is pseudonym of Louis-Frédéric Nussbaum, ''see'' (Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Authority File ).〕 He began studying Japanese at the University of Berlin, then transferred to Tokyo Imperial University in 1912,〔Zurndorfer, Harriet Thelma. (1995). ( ''China Bibliography: A Research Guide to Reference Works About China Past and Present,'' p. 31. )〕 becoming the first Westerner to graduate in Japanese as well as its first Western graduate student. Elisséeff served in 1916 as Privat-Dozent at Petrograd Imperial University (modern Saint Petersburg State University), and in 1917 as Professor in the Institute for the History of Foreign Affairs in Petrograd.〔( "Serge Elisseeff Chosen to be Harvard Professor," ) ''The Harvard Crimson.'' January 26, 1934.〕 Many years later, his émigrée memories of chaos and fear during the Russian Revolution were stirred by the effects of pernicious McCarthyism at Harvard.〔Bellah, Robert ''et al.''. ( "Letters to the Editor: ''Veritas'' at Harvard, Another Exchange," ) ''New York Review of Books.'' Vol. 24, No. 12. July 14, 1977.〕 Fluent in eight languages, including Chinese and Japanese, Elisséeff was one of the foremost Japanologists of his time, both in the West and in Japan. He had close personal ties to many of the greatest literary names of the first half of the century and wrote occasional articles for the ''Asahi Shimbun''. ==Life and career==
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