Forgive my temerity in raising a topic about which I know very little. With the help of certain members here I was recently able to outline, at the annual Japanese Studies Association Canada (JSAC) conferencehere in Victoria, BC, CANADA. the Japanese influence through Fenellosa and Pound, and also show evidences of it in Canadian Lit. Prof. and media prof. Marshall McLuhan. In the process I ran into some interesing (to me anyway) scholarly questions. Apparently, due to a syndrome somnetimes called orientalism, which put very rosey lenses on the engagment of Westerners with orintal culture, both Fenellosa and Pound got it wrong. Fenellosa was not justified in ignoring grammar, and Pound was unduly influenced by the kanji element. A lot of westerners, and very many Japanese are under the impression that the japaese do not think in words. They think in images. Linguists have disproven that illusion thoroughly. One I consulted called it Orientalism run amock. Here is a website that challenges Fenellosa. http://www.pinyin.info/readings/texts/ezra_pound_chinese.html Kenner's Pound Era does its bit to set the record straight. Being an Eliot scholar of sorts, the above came to me as something of a surprise. It is a road that never seems to have been along my path. Perhaps it is old news here.