The Kuzushiji Project: Developing a Mobile Learning Application for Reading Early Modern Japanese Books Hashimoto Yuta Kyoto University, Japan yhashimoto1984@gmail.com Iikura Yoichi Osaka University, Japan iikura@let.osaka-u.ac.jp Hisada Yukio Osaka University, Japan fmptsr3431@gmail.com Kang SungKook Osaka University, Japan izaya6013@yahoo.co.jp Arisawa Tomoyo Osaka University, Japan t.arisawa212@gmail.com Okajima Akihiro Osaka University, Japan aki@o.email.ne.jp Yada Tsutomu Osaka University, Japan mtsutomu@tiara.ocn.ne.jp Goyama Rintaro Osaka University, Japan goyama@let.osaka-u.ac.jp K-B Daniel Osaka University, Japan wappuccino@gmail.com 2016-03-04T12:58:00Z Maciej Eder, Pedagogical University in Krakow Jan Rybicki, Jagiellonian University
Institute of Polish Studies Pedagogical University ul. Podchorazych 2 30-084 Krakow, Poland maciej.eder@ijp-pan.krakow.pl

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Paper Poster Japanese studies kuzushiji mobile learning open data literary studies software design and development social media mobile applications and mobile design cultural infrastructure English
Introduction

It frequently happens in the modern history that a certain cultural skill that used to be shared in a community or society is lost in the process of modernization. Over the last century, Japanese people have lost the basic skills to read kuzushiji, classical calligraphic renderings of Japanese characters (see Fig. 1). Since Japanese society ceased to use kuzushiji for publication after the Meiji Period (1868-), most Japanese today except trained experts are unable to read books printed with kuzushiji only 150 years ago.

However, from 2008 a group of scholars of Japanese literature have started calling attention to the need for providing younger generation with the tools to access their own past (Nakano, 2011 and Moretti, 2014). The kuzushiji project, which started in 2015, is an attempt to build a mobile learning application that provides resources and trainings for reading kuzushiji

Our project blog: https://plus.google.com/104467959383842469455/posts.

. We call the app the KuLA (kuzushiji learning application). It is a public humanities project, as well as an interdisciplinary project of Japanese Literature and Digital Humanities scholars. In this paper, we will briefly describe the features, workflows, and implementation of the KuLA.

Fig. A comparison of a kuzushiji and modern Japanese type font. Both represents the same character 前, "front" in English
Features of KuLA

Learning kuzushiji is essentially similar with learning a foreign language. What you need for learning it are as followings: 1) the basic knowledge about kuzushiji, especially of character shapes, 2) decent amount of exercises of reading actual texts, and 3) good mentors and fellows who will teach and motivate you.

For the reasons above the KuLA consists of the following three modules:

Characters module, where the user will learn the basic knowledge about kuzushiji, especially about character shapes. The user can browse the list of kuzushiji characters and jump to the detail page of each character (see Fig. 2). Reading module, where the user will read actual texts written with kuzushiji for exercises. The user can also check their transcribed texts (see Fig. 3). Communication module, where the user will communicate with others via the network. This module will, for instance, enable the user to ask others how to read a specific kuzushiji characters by sharing photos taken by the user (See Fig. 4).
Fig. The character module
Fig. The reading module
Fig. The community module
Workflow and Implementation

In order to create the teaching materials bundled with the KuLA we needed a lot of actual images of kuzushiji. For collecting them efficiently we developed a Chrome extension which enables to capture arbitrary image regions from the digital collection of pre-modern books provided by the National Institute of Japanese Literature

https://www.nijl.ac.jp/

. The images captured by the extension will be automatically uploaded to an web app built with Ruby on Rails. In this way we have gathered so far about 3,000 images of kuzushiji characters

You can see the list of kuzushiji images we have collected in the following link: https://youreicollector.herokuapp.com/characters/

.

The mobile app was built with Ionic

http://ionicframework.com/

, a HTML5 mobile framework based on Apache Cordova and AngularJS frameworks. The use of HTML5 technology makes it possible to generate the distributions both for iOS and Android from a single source code. As the backend of the mobile clients we used parse.com, which provides basic server-side features such as user authentication and data storage.

Conclusion and Future Directions

KuLA was released both on Google Play and on App Store for free on 18 Feburary 2016. It has been downloaded more than 5,000 times in two weeks after the launch. The average review scores are 4.5/5.0 in AppStore (total 15 reviews), and 4.9/5.0 in Google Play (total 29 reviews). From these numbers we may say that our design strategy for building KuLA was successful.

We believe that it is a duty of humanities scholars to build the tools to access the past knowledge for further generations. And what makes Digital Humanities special in this regard among other humanities discipline is that it can directly provide those tools with the public with the help of digital media such as mobile devices.

Bibliography Nakano, M. (2011). Wahon No Susume. Iwanami Shoten. Moretti, L. (2014). Reading hentaigana and kuzushiji Manual. http://wakanedo.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Edo-no-kakikotoba-2014-hentaigana-kuzushiji-Manual-1.pdf