Kids Library Home

Welcome to the Kids' Library!

Search for books, movies, music, magazines, and more.

     
Available items only
Print Material
Author Watanabe, Kyji, 1930- author.

Uniform Title Yukishi yo no omokage. English
Title Remnants of days past : a journey through old Japan / Watanabe Kyoji ; translated by Joseph Litsch.

Publication Info. Tokyo, Japan : Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture, 2020.
2020

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 2nd Floor Stacks  915.20425 W29r 2020    ---  Available
Edition First English edition.
Description 471 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Series Japan library
Japan library (Shuppan Bunka Sangy Shink Zaidan)
Note "This book is a translation of Yukishi yo no omokage which was originally published by Ashishobo in 1998"--Title page verso.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 457-466) and index.
Contents Illusions of a Civilization -- Cheerful People -- Simplicity and Wealth -- Friendliness and Courtesy -- Fullness and Variety -- Labor and the Body -- Freedom and Status -- The Naked Body and Sex -- The Status of Women -- A Children's Paradise -- Scenery and Cosmology -- Living Things and Cosmology -- Religious Beliefs and Festivals -- Barriers of the Mind.
Summary "Remnants of Days Past, by Kyoji Watanabe, is an epic journey into Japan's past. It is a comprehensive look at the Tokugawa rule and the Edo period, an age in which the civilization of "Old Japan" was still on display and which, for better or worse, ceased to exist with the advent of modernization. Watanabe covers in great detail several topics pertaining to this civilization, including the status and position of the various social classes, views of women and children, attitudes towards sex, labor, and the body and religious beliefs, as well as the unique cosmology behind this civilization. Watanabe makes use of a number of works written by foreign observers who visited Japan from the end of the Edo period to the beginning of the Meiji to support his views. As the author writes in the book, "What is important in my mind is the reality that the civilization of 'Old Japan' developed through a universal desire, as well as the ideas behind this desire, to make it as comfortable as possible for human existence." This is a massive work that takes an in-depth look at what modern Japan has lost"-- Book cover.
Subject Japan -- Civilization -- 1600-1868.
Japan -- History -- Tokugawa period, 1600-1868 -- Sources.
Japan -- Foreign public opinion.
Visitors, Foreign -- Japan.
Japan -- Civilization -- 1868-1912.
Japan -- Civilization -- 19th century.
Civilization. (OCoLC)fst00862898
Visitors, Foreign. (OCoLC)fst01167960
Japan. (OCoLC)fst01204082
Chronological Term 1800-1912
Added Author Litsch, Joseph, 1976- translator.
ISBN 9784866581408
4866581409

 
    
Available items only