BU
Major Japan Links
We wish to express our
appreciation to Professor Cora Agatucci of Central
Oregon College for the original design and links of this page, as well as her
commentary and annotations, which we have edited and rearranged for Belmont's
needs.
maps&generalresourcesMaps of Asia
(Univ. of Texas, most from
the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency)
Timelines of
Asia: China, India,
Japan
Timeline of
Japan
A Good Place to Start:
Teaching & Learning about Japan "the
first in a projected five part series of illustrated Web presentations, uses
'picture book' quality photographs and a series of maps
to illustrate basic features of Japanese geography, to profile (and physically
locate) major Japanese urban centers, to suggest continuities between past and
present and to introduce the Japanese people in a 'slide lecture' format." (Full slide show
takes about 30 min.)
Asian Studies
Development Program (ASDP)
Japan: Subject
Guide (Council
on East Asian Libraries, Univ. of Oregon)
Japan Web Guide (Forest Linton)
Japanese WWW
Resources (Michael
Watson)
Contemporary Japanese
Culture & Society (Japan Information Network)
language&writingThe Human
Languages Pages: Japanese (Willamette Univ.) with links to The Kid's
Window
(Japan Window Project, Stanford University and NTT, 1995); and The Japanese
Tutor, "the Largest site on the WWW
that teaches Japanese for free," and much more--"featured in Japan's
Largest Newspaper, The
Yomiuri Shinbun, as the best source to learn Japanese."
Key Aspects of
Japan (in English and Japanese
versions) and updated version of the 1993 Traditional
Japanese Culture & Modern Japan. See, for example, discussions
of modern Japanese Language: Hogen (Dialects), Keigo (Honorific language), Moji
(Characters), Nihongo (Japanese), Nihongo-kyoiku (Japanese-language education): "...[there are] three kinds of moji: the ideographic Chinese characters known as kanji and the phonetic characters known as
hiragana and
katakana.
Originally, Japanese had no moji, but
in the fifth century
documents came to be recorded using Chinese characters.
The Japanese devised the way of reading those Chinese characters in a Japanese
way and, based on Chinese characters, created the phonetic characters. The
basis for phonetic moji was established in the Heian Period (794-1185), and it is with such moji that Murasaki Shikibu (978?-1026?)
completed the world's oldest novel, "Genji Monogatari
"(The Tale of Genji).
Today, katakana is
mainly used for foreign words, and Chinese characters and hiragana for composing sentences. In
addition, it is possible to write only in phonetic characters, including Roman
letters." Or see
Traditional Japan: Culture & Arts, for a discussion of Shodo (Calligraphy): "Shodo is the art of drawing characters with a brush and
India ink to express spiritual depth and beauty. Shodo
originally came from China, but in Japan Chinese characters (kanji) were combined with the Japanese syllabary (kana),
devised in Japan, to create this unique character art. With a brush soaked in
India ink one can freely control, unlike with a pen, the thickness and the tone
of the characters. That is how the calligraphers are able to express their
spirits and ideas. Beyond the standard square style of writing (kaisho),
calligraphic style can be divided into the somewhat simplified semicursive style(gyosho)
and the still more simplified cursive style (sosho). Except for New Year's cards and
the like, a brush is ordinarily not used for writing, but shodo
is included in the elementary school curriculum.
historyJapan before Written
History: Migrations; From Hunters to
Rice Growers: Jomon period and
Yayoi period; Birth of a
Nation under Chinese Influences: Nara and Kyoto (brief historical essays focusing on
technology with images from ICT, Inc.)
Maps of Ancient
Japan from Richard
Hooker's World Cultures Atlases
Timelines of
Asia: China, India, Japan
Timeline of
Japan
Major Events in
Japanese History (Gen-ichi Nishio)
Japan: History
links (Council on East Asian Libraries, Univ. of Oregon)
Heian Japan (794-1192)
Tokugawa Japan (1603-1868)
History of
Mathematics: Japan
History of
Japanese Education (Robert Crowley)
religion&philosophyComparative Religion &
Religious Studies links (Mike Madin,
new educational directory Academic Info)
From the Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance: Descriptions of
63 Religions, Faith Groups, & Ethical Systems,
including Buddhism, Confucianism, Shinto,
and Taoism. **Exploring
Religions
(Professor Paul Flesher, Univ. of Wyoming),
Resources for
the Study of Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism
Japan Glossary
Religious & Sacred Texts, including
links to the Analects, Taoist, and
Zen texts.
From Richard Hooker's World Cultures ("an internet classroom and anthology")
Shinto: see What is Shinto? and "Shinto
and the Sacred Dimension of Nature" (Dr. Carmen Blacker, Univ. of Cambridge). Shinto, kami, Shinto: The
Japanese Heart - Tour a Shinto Shrine Visit "Shinto,
Primal Religion and International Identity" (Michael Pye, Marburg Journal of Religion
1.1,April 1996) U of Pittsburgh's Shrine of Ise (essay and images).
Japanese
Buddhism: A Historical Overview
(with images). Buddhism, including origins,
Japanese Buddhism, Buddhist readings & glossary of key concepts, Amida Buddhism.
**Zen Buddhism.
**Buddhism for
Beginners (Jeff
Hooks, St. Petersburg Junior College).**Buddhist
Studies and the Arts with many useful links (hosted by Randall
R. Scott, B.S., M.Div., M.A. Research Associate in Buddhist Studies and
Classics, Washington University in St. Louis; & The Doyle Gallery)**Journal of
Buddhist Ethics (Penn State
University/Goldsmiths College [London], USA/UK)**Exploring
Religions (Professor Paul Flesher,
Univ. of Wyoming), including Buddhism,
**Buddhism (Eitarou Aoyama)
Japan Buddhist
Arts
literatureAsian Studies
Development Program (ASDP) Syllabus & Bibliography Collection: Online Resources on
Asia for College Courses: Literature, with reading lists and
bibliographies, provided by the Kapiolane Community
College, the East-West Center and the Univ. of Hawai'i at Manoawith
reading lists and bibliographies, provided by Kapiolane
Community College, the East-West Center and the Univ. of Hawai'i at Manoa
Brief History of
Japan's Literature (The Web Kanzaki, based on Japan: A Pocket Guide, Foreign
Press Center 1996)
Japanese
Literature (and many more topics & links) from Japan, my
Japan!-- A Guide to Japan. Japanese
Literature (resources from Duke
Univ.), including Guides to
Literature in Translation and links to Flowering of
Japanese Literature.
Japanese Text
Initiative is a collaborative effort
of the University of Virginia Library Electronic Text
Center and the University of Pittsburgh East Asian Library "to make texts
of classical Japanese literature available on the World Wide Web." Some of
the electronic texts require software that reads Japanese characters; however,
good introductory articles and some translations are in English.
Japanese
Studies links, focusing on pre-modern
literature--see English only
version if you prefer (Michael Watson, Meiji Gakuin
University; Yokohama; and postgraduate student, working on the medieval
Japanese narrative The Tale of the
Heike [Heike monogatari] at the Faculty of Oriental
Studies, Oxford Univ.).
Japanese
Creation Myth (712 CE) from Genji Shibukawa: Tales from the Kojiki (an
excerpt from Reading
About the World, Volume 1,
edited by Paul Brians, Mary Gallwey,
Douglas Hughes, Michael Myers, Michael Neville, Roger Schlesinger, Alice
Spitzer, and Susan Swan; published by American Heritage Custom Publishing.)
Tales of
Wonder: Tales from Japan (Richard Darsie, UCDavis) Tales 2-3 below
are taken from Japanese Folk
Tales, by James E. O'Donnell, illustrated by Kasumi Nagao.
Caldwell, Idaho: Caxton Printers, 1958. 1.The Tongue-Cut Sparrow; 2.Tiny Finger; and
3.Urashima Taro.
See also The Kid'sWindow: Peach Boy (Momotaro, Stanford Univ. & NTT)
Nihon-no-Kotowaza--Japanese
proverbs: click and discover their literal translations and
equivalent English proverbs. For example: Nihon-no-Kotowaza #2: Baka wa
shinanakya naoranai - Literally:
A fool is only cured by
dying; English equivalent: Once a fool, always a fool.
mono no aware in Japanese literature.
Japanese Poetry:
See Lewis Cook's Introduction What is Kokin
Wakashu?
(A
Collection of Ancient and Modern Japanese Poems).
The majority of the 1,111 Japanese poems in this anthology are "in the
form called tanka
(literally "short poem or song"), but traditionally referred to as waka
("Japanese song/poem") or simply as uta ("song, poem") because
this was the predominant canonical form of Japanese poetry from perhaps the 8th
century until the late 19th century" (Cook). The Japanese preface to this
anthology Ogura Hyakunin Isshu,
or 100 Poems by 100 Poets,
an anthology of "waka"
or tanka court poetry possibly compiled by the 13th-century critic and poet Fujiwara no Sadaie,
also known as Teika).
See Introduction:
What is Ogura Hyakunin Isshu?,
A Note on the
English Translation and Japanese and
English versions of the poems, and woodblock print
illustrations of the poems from
a 19th-century Meiji-era edition of the Hyakunin
poems designed for women, and MacCauley's translation
of Hyakunin-Isshu.
Don't miss the earlier beautiful ukiyo-e style
illustration by Hokusai (reproduced in
Peter Morse, Hokusai: One Hundred Poets,
New York: Braziller, 1989).
Forthcoming
texts are to include Manyoshu
and Basho's Oku no Hosomichi
so check this site again! (Japanese Text Initiative/U. Virginia
Library Electronic Text Center & U. Pittsburgh East Asian Library). Tanka and Sijo Poetry (Japanese and Korean);
Study Guide for
Classic Chinese and Japanese Love Poetry
(Paul Brians, Washington State Univ.)
Glossary of
Poetic Terms (Robert
G. Shubinski, 1996, 1997)
Murasaki Shikibu (978?-1026?), Japanese
writer and the author of what is generally considered the world's first novel, The Tale of Genji
(first trans. by Arthur Waley in
6 vol., 1925-32).
Haiku: Haiku page.**Haiku links (Yahoo); Introduction to
International Haiku
Dhugal J. Lindsay's Haiku Universe, plus links to Renga/Renku
and Tanka.
Otsuji on haiku
The World of
Kenji Miyazawa (1896-1933)
Japanese Nobel Prize Winners in
Literature: 1968 KAWABATA,
YASUNARI, Japan, 1899 - 1972: "for his
narrative mastery, which with great sensibility expresses the essence of the
Japanese mind" 1994 OE, KENZABURO, Japan, b. 1935-: "who
with poetic force creates an imagined world, where life and myth condense to
form a disconcerting picture of the human predicament today" (and see more links
from Yahoo)
The Remains of the
Day, by Kazuo Ishiguro, won the 1989 Booker
McConnell Prize (administered
by the National Book League in the United Kingdom, awarded to the best
full-length novel written in English by a citizen of the UK, the Commonwealth,
Eire, Pakistan or South Africa.)
Zen Comedy in
Commonwealth Literature: Kazuo Ishiguro's The Remains of the Day (essay) Ishiguro
http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/hypertext/landow/post/ishiguro/ishiguroov.html
and from: http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/hypertext/landow/post/ishiguro/kibio.html
Kazuo Ishiguro's Life and Works (1954- )
From: http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/hypertext/landow/post/ishiguro/kichron.html
artsChronology of Japan's
Fine Arts (The Web Kanzaki,
from Japan:
A Pocket Guide, Foreign
Press Center: 1996)
Introduction to
Asian Art (Prof. Katheryn
M. Linduff, Dept. of Art History, Univ.
of Pittsburgh) will yield rich cultural backgrounds on China, India, and Japan, if one follows with
patience the frames of the illustrated course notes
Timelines of
Art History (Michael D. Gunther, 1997) "selective resources on the art history
of ancient and non-Western civilizations" including China, India, and Japan: see
Japan Resources
Japanese Art
Slides by period/style (http://www.colby.edu/art/AsianArt/japan), including:
Jomon "cord pattern"
pottery (5000-200 BCE); Yayoi
period Bronze Bell (200 BCE-CE 200); Kofun era Bronze Mirror (CE 200-500); Shaka Triad, Buddhist art (ca. 623) of Asuka
period (CE 552-645); Shitenno, clay statue of Nara period (710-794);
Horyu-ji (8th c., Nara): Four groups of dry clay figures at the floor of the five-
story pagoda.
Ho-o-Do "Phoenix
Hall" of Byodo-in (ca. 1053); Amida Buddha (ca. 1053) by Jocho; and
beautiful narrative picture scrolls
(1, 2, 3, 4, ca. CE 1120-1140) from the Tale
of Genji, all of late Heian
period.
A Brief History
of Japanese Prints (Shogun Gallery):
"Japanese Woodblock Prints or Ukiyo·e (Pictures
of the Floating World), came into being in the middle of the 17th Century, at the end of
close to a century of feudal wars."
mono no aware in Japanese Art.
Images online
Many riches await those who browse Asian Arts, an on-line journal "for the study and exhibition of
the arts of Asia," with virtual galleries and illustrated
article abstracts. Scene from Tales of Heike
(early 13th c.) from Kamakura
Shogunate era (1185-1333); Photo of Zen garden Ryoan-ji
at Kyoto (late 15th c.); Colors of
Streams, Hues of Mountains, painting attri. to Shubun
(early-mid 15th c.); and Zen Buddhist Raku-ware tea
bowl, designed by Sen-no-Rikyu (1521-1591);
all of Muromachi/Ashikaga period
(1392-1573); Painted screen of Women of
Fashion at Leisure (early Edo/Tokugawa period, ca.
1600-1650); and Great Wave from
Kanagawa from 36 Views of Mt. Fuji, by Katsushika
Hokusai of Edo/Tokugawa period
(1615-1868) Japanese Section,
British Library Collections: Courtesan reading a picture book. One of the 167
girls depicted in Ehon seirô
bijin awase, `Picture-book comparing
the Beauties of the Green Houses' by Suzuki Harunobu.
Five vols. (Edo, 1770)
http://www.bl.uk/collections/oriental/japan.html
Asian Art
Museum of San Francisco is the largest museum in the western world devoted to the arts and
cultures of Asia, with permanent collections representing over 40 Asian
countries spanning 6,000 years of history. See exhibitions and follow links to the special exhibit Four Centuries
of Fashion: Classical Kimono from the Kyoto National Museum.
Japan Buddhist
Arts
A Visual Literacy
Exercise (Lee A. Makela, 1996, Dept.
of History, Cleveland State Univ.) of selected woodblock prints--15 stunning Images! like YUI--from
a famous series depicting scenic views of the Fifty Three
Stations of the Tokaido
(Tokaido gojusantsugi).
The Tokaido "('Eastern Sea Route')
was the main coastal road linking the headquarters of the period's military
leadership in Edo (the modern city of Tokyo) with the site of
the Japanese imperial court in Kyoto, several hundred kilometers to the
south and west. They were completed originally during the middle of the
nineteenth century by the Japanese print artist Hiroshige Ando (1797 - 1858).
KANAGAWA,
Print Four in the Reisho Series: Two-story teahouses
provide respite to Tokaido
travelers, offering both refreshment and commanding views of Edo
Bay.
NUMAZU,
Print Thirteen in the Hoeido Series:
Traveling musicians carrying samisen.
FUJISAWA,
Print Seven in the Hoeido Series:
Pilgrims arrive to visit Yugyoji (a
renowned Buddhist temple founded in 1325, located on the hillside
overlooking the village) or the Enoshima Benten Jinja
(a Shinto
shrine dedicated to the Goddess of Music located beyond the torii ngateway in the foreground).
12 Prints by
Kogyo (1869-1927) and a brief
essay "About the Artist
and Noh Drama..." (Shogun Gallery)
theater&performanceArtsTraditional Performing
Arts in Japan (classical theater and traditional
music, from The Web Kanzaki, based on Japan: A Pocket Guide, Foreign Press Center: 1996)
Courtesy of the city of Kanazawa, learn about Traditional
Arts & Crafts, featuring traditional
Japanese theater arts.
Traditional
Japanese Theater Links
Noh Plays:
Introduction to
Noh Plays (Thomas Rimer),
Technical Terms
for Noh plays (Royall Tyler),
including a diagram
of the Noh stage; and Glossary of
Japanese Noh Terms (Karen Brazell).**Background to
Noh Theater**Nogami Nogaku Research
Institute of Hosei University: "'Nogaku' is
used to refer to the two arts of No [see
below] and
Kyogen [independent humorous pieces that are traditionally
performed between two separate NOH
plays as comic relief]. Both
trace back at least six hundred years. They are also theaters that are active
today. The Institute is committed to fostering research on both historical and
contemporary topics related to Nogaku, and strives as well to support
further growth in these arts." The "refined
world of Noh," with links to "What is
it?" and
beautiful images of Noh
performances: "In the
14th century the SARUGAKU performers Kiyotsugu Kan'ami
(1333- 1394) and his son Zeami Motokiyo
(1363-1443) created a new type of theater,...imbued
with a serious Buddhist tone."
Visit also the Noh Mask Home
Page. Noh and Kabuki, from the Asia
Society's Video Letter from Japan: Living Arts (1988,
p. 34) See a modern interpretation in close-up!
Kabuki Arts: The Ultimate
Home Page Index: Kabuki - "From this
page, you can directly search every major search engine for kabuki with a
single click! The entire world wide web is at your disposal!" ** An Introduction to
The Grand Kabuki Theater
(Duane T. Ebata, Japanese American Cultural & Community Center, Los
Angeles, California). DEFINING THE WORD: KA = song; BU = dance; KI =
ability/skill. "Originally, the word was a verb --kabuku-- which meant something like
"to stand at an angle," "to be off balance" or "lean
to one side." This gave rise to its use as a term to refer to a person who
was unusual, off beat and unconventional. Unconventional, particularly since
the social trends of the time looked with disfavor upon those who were
excessive and unorthodox. That included extravagance in dress and behavior.
Therefore, kabuki also connoted the perception of being "excessively
fashionable" and "faddish," even "avant-garde."**Kabuki History (from
Kabuki
for Everyone): Kabuki: A Brief
History and The Genroku Period
(Edo/Tokugawa era, late17th century) "was...the time when most of the
conventions and stylizations of Kabuki, including play structure, character
types, the art of the onnagata, took form.** Kunijo Kabuki Ekotoba,
An
Illustrated Manuscript of Japanese Classical Play Kabuki- Kuni's
Kabuki, (Kyoto Univ. Library), is "one of the most important
and distinguished materials for the study of the Kabuki, a classical play in
Japan, established at the opening of the Tokugawa period
about 350 years ago." The illumination is an example of a Naraehon (Picture books edited in Nara)
manuscript, because they were produced by a group of painters, Edokoro, at the Kasuga
and other shrines in the city of Nara. Sharaku, Kabuki actor
/ Edobe (The Japan Ukiyo-e Museum,
1995, featuring more UKIYO-E wood-block prints of everyday life of the past
Japan, Edo period, 1603 - 1867: "The word "ukiyo-e"
means "the
picture of buoyant world" and incorporates in its meaning the
common man's daily pleasures, such as Kabuki plays, Geisha houses, and so
on." Kabuki Actors**Kumadori: Kabuki Faces: "In
addition to brilliant costumes, many styles of makeup are used. One such
called kumadori, or "making shadows,"
is an art form in itself. In kumadori, white foundation
is applied to the entire face, and one of a set of established colorful
patterns is painted on. The two most common colors used are red, which
denotes virtues such as bravery, strength, and justice,
and dark
blue, which expresses negative traits like jealousy
and fear.
Black, terra-cotta, bronze, and gold are common as well." --Noh and Kabuki, from
the Asia
Society's Video Letter from Japan: Living Arts (1988,
p. 34) See
a modern interpretation in close-up!
**Kabuki for
Everyone, English version. The names of
illustrious kabuki actors, like Danjuro Ichikawa,
also become part of the theater tradition, taken on by their successors in
later generations: "The first Danjuro Ichikawa
was born in 1660 during the Edo period." Today, the name is carried on as
well by a new form of female Kabuki: "Among Kabuki's family, there are a
few distinguished families.
One of those families, the Ichikawas,
has accepted our way, and three of our actors have been permitted to use of the
Ichikawa family name. We will do our best to be true to
its "Ichikawa" name from now on" ("Daughters
of Kabuki").**Kabuki for
Everyone in Taiwan: "The fact that
it was created and developed during a period Japan was shut off from the rest
of the world by the policies of the Tokugawa military government, which also
restricted the freedom of theater in many ways, makes the conventions and
stylizations difficult to understand for many non-Japanese."(See the Photo Library.)**Kabuki Print
(Musashiya, Inc, Honolulu, Hawaii).**
Kabuki,
"a form of Japanese theater using live actors, began around the same time
as bunraku. It originated in
Kyoto with
new kinds of dances performed by a woman named Okuni
in the early
1600s. These became highly popular, and Okuni
was imitated by other actresses and actors. But the Japanese government,
deciding that the performances were immoral, decreed in 1629
that women could no longer appear on the stage. Women's roles were taken over by men,
and this practice continues in modern Kabuki." But see Nagoya Musume Kabuki ("Daughters
of Kabuki"):"Our dramatic 'Kabuki' company was organized only by
female members in 1983. Kabuki' is a traditional Japanese art
originally performed only by males. The female roles performed by males could
draw feminine gestures,tenderness,
motherhood, and tender passion more effectively. Therefore, we tried to form a female
group because we think that the male roles performed by females might emphasize
male bravery, consideration, and toughness. We believe that we would discover
other good qualities of 'Kabuki' in the opposite sense using the female 'New
Kabuki' versus the traditional male 'Kabuki'."
Ichiriki Teahouse, an illustrated
synopsis of the seventh act of Kanadehon Chushingura
(The Revenge of the 47 Ronin, or masterless
samurai, written in 1748),
"the most popular play in kabuki
and the bunraku puppet theater..."
Bunraku, a detailed, very
readable essay on Japanese puppet theatre, including the history of its
development (from FACTS ABOUT JAPAN, The International Society for Educational
Information, Inc., Tokyo) - from the Introduction: "The Japanese puppet
show, known as bunraku,
in which each puppet is operated by three men, requires a superior degree of
skill in
manipulation, and features elaborate forms of expression and superb artistry.
In these respects, bunraku
is a precious heritage of folk culture in which Japan can take justifiable
pride."
A Brief
Introduction to the History of Bunraku, evolving from a long tradition of ningyo-joruri,
literally puppets and storytelling, can be dated from 1684, when Takemoto Gidayu set up his own
theater in Osaka (by Matthew Johnson, B.A. Japanese, UCLA, currently residing
in Japan, with a collection of Ukiyo-e woodblock
prints, Otsu-e folk prints and pictures of Japanese dance worth a visit!--click the blue
leaf.)
filmFrom
The Internet
Movie Database Tour: Country
Browser: Japan. **Japanese Cinema (Council
on East Asian Libraries, Univ. of Oregon), including links to Kinema Club (an informal group of scholars
studying Japanese cinema and other moving image media), and Univ. of Iowa's Japanese Film
Studies Bibliography
Rhapsody in August (Hachigatsu no kyoshikyoku, Japan, 1991), dir. Akira Kurosawa,
with Ishiro Honda (for some uncredited
scenes). Akira Kurosawa (b.
1910, Omori, Tokyo, Japan -d. 1997) trained first as a painter (he storyboards
his films as full-scale paintings), then entered the film industry in 1936 as
an assistant director, making his directorial debut in 1943. After working in a
wide range of genres, he made his breakthrough film Rashomon
(In the Woods, Japan,1950)
in 1950.
It won the top prize at the Venice Film Festival (see also other awards),
and first revealed the richness of Japanese cinema to the West. It was followed
by Ikiru (To Live, Japan, 1952) and Shichinin no samurai (The Seven Samurai, Japan, 1954; remade in the USA as The Magnificent Seven, 1960). After lean periods
in the 1960s and attempted suicide in the 1970s, Kurosawa reemerged, with the
help of admirers Francis Coppola and
George Lucas, to make the
samurai epic Kagemusha ("The Shadow Warrior," Japan, 1980),
followed by his second Shakespeare adaptation Ran (Japan/France, 1985),which won the 1986 Academy
Award for Best Director.
He continued to work into his eighties with the more personal films like Dreams
(Yume,
also trans.Akira Kurosawa's Dreams, Japan/USA, 1990) and
Rhapsody in
August (1991).
Kurosawa's films have always been more popular in the West than in his native
Japan, where critics have viewed his adaptations of Western genres and authors
(William Shakespeare, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Maxim Gorky and Evan Hunter) with
suspicion. But he's revered by American and European film-makers, who have
frequently imitated and remade his films.
Akira Kurosawa
Database (Nobuji
Tamura, 1996, Temple Univ.), including Rhapsody in
August
Japanese Film
Masters: director Masaki Kobayashi and
composer Toru Takemitsu, who collaborated on 10 films (Donald Keene
Center of Japanese Culture, Columbia Univ.), a film series.cocc.edu/cagatucci/classes/hum210/asianlinks/japan.htm
"To the
Japanese mind, Fujisan is much more than a single volcano. It is
regarded as a sacred object, and the climbing of Mt. Fuji has long been a
religious practice. It has exerted a great influence upon Japanese culture. Throughout
the history of Japanese art and literature, this holy mountain has been the
subject of uncountable poems and pictures. The yearning for greatness and
beauty symbolized by Fujisan led the ancients to name many local
mountains and towns after this beautiful mountain."
Mt. Fuji photo
gallery (Yoshiyuki Miyata):