2020/12/22
visiting a "book cafe" in Fukui-ken
2020/12/21
new book (2019), Japan & China interrelations of 15 centuries
2020/11/16
conversations (podcast series), "Deep Dive"
language of the Ainu
2020/11/04
Minamata 1968 story of pollution traumas, trailer
2020/11/02
Europe's only officially sanctioned Shinto shrine
2020/10/30
Miyazaki Hayao's ANIME, the early years
2020/10/29
online database of events for Japan Studies
(Please circulate.)
The Japanese Studies Events Da
The database is intended to serve the international Japanese Studies community—students, scholars, institutes and institutions—by providing a virtual clearing house for information about the range and vibrancy of programmatic activities and research taking place about Japan. There are so many wonderful things—lectures, webinars, online workshops and panels—taking place at universities and centers around the globe. The hope is that the database will further deepen connections and foster collaboration within the larger community, particularly during these difficult times when holding in-person events is more challenging.
Universities, research centers, academic departments, and scholars are welcome to share Japan-related programming on this database. If you wish to post an event, please first contact rijs_events@fas.
Please browse the database here: https://
If you have questions, please contact rijs_events@fas.
2020/10/18
young learners & old, too (book - Wabi Sabi)
2020/08/28
two articles, "at the end of life in Japan"
Colleague Yohko Tsuji has published an article on the Anthropology-News blog about cultural and social developments in the care of the dead in Japan (cemetery decisions), https://www.anthropology-news.org/index.php/2020/08/13/changing-mortuary-practices-in-japan/
This nicely complements her 2014 article on the blog for Society for East Asia Anthropology concerning funeral practices. http://seaa.americananthro.org/2014/04/evolving-funerals-in-japan/
2020/08/02
Japan browsing - best podcasts to build wider experience of life and language of the islands
2020/07/24
in Kyoto 1910, "Makiko's New World"
2020/07/19
Rural population declines leading to more 'aki ya' (vacant homes)
2020/07/13
now streaming (5 minute anime; English & Japanese) for "Mottainai Granny"
2020/07/12
new Ainu museum opens
2020/07/09
looking at 1913-1915 Tokyo in moving pictures
2020/03/27
collection of 89 videos in Open Access (Smithsonian Institution) project
2020/03/14
since the 1970s - the arc of Japanese society
Against this background, the Osaka Expo opened to the general public on March 15, 1970. It came just six years after the hugely successful 1964 Tokyo Olympics. By the time the expo ended 183 days later on Sept. 13, a record 64 million visitors had passed through its gates.
2020/02/13
Internment in concentration camps - the USA in WWII-era, but also Pres. Trump's Mexican border
This is part of a series (description by photographer follows).
Series Description: This series is about Japanese internment camps that were built in remote and harsh areas of the United States during the Second World War. These camps imprisoned 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry - more than 60% of them were U.S. citizens.
Working on the project reminded me of the racial antagonism we have witnessed in recent history, and led me to consider how radically our view can alter when war and terror affect our lives. History can always be repeated if not properly recalled or told. The pictures here were taken between 2018 and '19 in California, Arizona and Utah. For the aerial shots, I used a drone to capture the camp sites - these locations are so harsh and remote that no one would try building anything here.
2020/01/24
roving camera - Shinjuku on a bike
2020/01/03
video, Wedding of the Showa days (re-enactment)
2019/12/19
upcoming exhibition - National Ainu museum
2019/12/15
in Japan when you want to 'disappear' from your customary life
2019/11/20
Leprosy in Japan's history, book review
2019/11/18
photo exhibition - Showa period Japan
Commentary about an exhibition in Canada of Japanese photographers with scenes from Showa days.
At the end of the article is a link to the curator's own remarks of the collected pictures,
2019/10/30
making Matcha in Kagoshima
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSz6y5kEdxo –documenting how to make the fine tea
2019/10/24
specialized vocabulary... Flooding: what to do next
2019/10/17
Nagoya’s censored art exhibition and the “comfort women” controversy
Freedom Fighting: Nagoya's censored art exhibition and the "comfort women" controversy |
| An exhibition of censored artwork in Nagoya city triggers a furious debate on artistic expression. The artistic director of the Aichi Triennale 2019 had few illusions when he planned an exhibition called "After Freedom of Expression". By choosing items that poked painfully at some of Japan's most tender spots - war crimes, subservience to America and the status of the imperial family - Tsuda Daisuke wanted to "provoke discussion" on the health of freedom of expression in the country. But what followed, he says, was "beyond our expectations". ... FULL TEXT of this article online, https://apjjf.org/2019/20/McNeill.html
2019/09/18video, Foundation for Ainu CultureSee the channel on Youtube for videos from the Foundation for Ainu Culture. Browsing these short movies can contribute to more vivid descriptions of the past and present of Ainu people around Japan today. See also the newsletter of the research center hosted at Hokkaido University in Sapporo to see the topics presented each semester by guest researchers and Ainu experts, Center for Ainu and Indigenous Studies, [CAIS] Hokkaido University aynu teetawanoankur kanpinuye cise https://www.cais.hokudai.ac.jp/english/ browse the video channel at Youtube> https://tinyurl.com/ainufoundation
2019/07/27virtually in Japan - video channel of streetscape walks https://www.youtube.com/user/Rambalac/videos has dozens of HD video to share: suitable for close-up view of behind the scenes/unrehearsed life in Japan in as much as a dSLR and microphone on a stabilizing gimbal can convey the texture, light, sound, and feeling of public spaces. 2019/07/02ekiben - nice summary, well-illustrated The art of food and display, along with the context of rail travel, come together to form another brief article from the guest writers at Atlas Obscura. Using the searchbox for 'Japan' will bring a dozen or two other topics from the Web project, too. 2019/06/15Telephone for grief after the Japanese tsunami Video story at bbc.com from June 9, 2019 Camera: Taiki Fujitani, Producer: Sarah Cuddon and Sophia Smith Galer [preamble] In the small town of Otsuchi in northern Japan, 2,000 residents were lost in the tsunami in 2011. One resident, who had already been grieving his cousin before the tsunami hit, had the idea of placing an old phone booth at the bottom of his garden with a disconnected rotary phone. He would ring his cousin's number and his words would "be carried on the wind" as he spoke to him. After the tsunami hit, and word about the wind phone spread, many more people have come to Otsuchi in Iwate prefecture, to call those they have lost. You can find out more about the wind phone by listening to the World Service's Heart and Soul programme, https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3csz4jr see also 2016 radio (online playback or download mp3) segment, https://www.thisamericanlife.org/597/one-last-thing-before-i-go or the radio show's transcript, https://www.thisamericanlife.org/597/transcript 2019/05/07illustration, pretty big ReiWa Here is a good illustration of the love for really big things on this kite that shows the new Reiwa. 2019/04/18early Japan ethnography 1950s-60s (taidan), Plath - VogelWith permission of the Midwest Japan Seminar, Japan Foundation and host at Ohio Wesleyan University, here is the Youtube link to the hour-long conversation recently between long-time friends and colleagues, Prs David Plath and Ezra Vogel. Hearing first-hand of their early years in the field and in Japanese Studies circles is eye-opening for one and all, no matter your scholarly generation or genealogy. Feel free to share widely with others. 2019/04/10poems from Japan (in English translation)Back in 2015 an artist was commissioned to hand-carve the translated Japanese poems of several centuries onto some of the large stones in the Japanese-style garden at the Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park in west Michigan. You can find out more about the choice of poets and see the dozen or so poems here, https://mishigan.blogspot.com/2019/04/poems-from-japan-in-english-at-meijer.html 2019/04/06eclectic articles - Japan examples, "Atlas Obscura"Typing a country or city into the searchbox at atlasobscura.com brings up a far-ranging collection of articles contributed by local writers. In early April 2019 there were a few Japan examples. This sample of stories is worth a look, or might prompt readers to look for the sorts of places, events, people being documented online.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= via Atlas Obscura in Brooklyn, NY The Beloved Japanese Novelist Who Became a Queer Manga Icon Nobuko Yoshiya's stories of frustrated, forbidden love helped establish a genre read by millions. by Sabrina Imbler April 04, 2019 https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/yoshiya-nobuko-queer-manga EXCERPT ...Yoshiya never married; instead she lived with a female partner, Chiyo Monma, for 50 years. Despite a life lived against the grain, Yoshiya became one of Japan's most beloved artists. She published feminist stories that focused on the strong emotional and romantic bonds between women—one with the notable title Danasama muyo (Husbands Are Useless). The impact of her novels is still being felt, far beyond the feminist and queer communities where she has become a particularly celebrated icon. Her writing laid the groundwork for shōjo manga, a genre of comics and graphic novels aimed toward teen girls that includes iconic titles such as Sailor Moon and Revolutionary Girl Utena—widely devoured by millions upon millions all over the world. "There is not a single woman alive who doesn't know who Yoshiya Nobuko is," declared a 1935 profile published in the magazine Hanashi. The Haunting Beauty of the Reconsecration of Shinto Shrines Photographer Yukihito Masuura spent more than a decade documenting rituals that connect past and present. by Jessica Leigh Hester April 05, 2019 https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/photographs-of-shinto-shrines-japan EXCERPT ...Through Masuura's lens, the images feel monumental. To hear him tell it, they hold everything a viewer needs to know about the subject of his recent series: the process of reconstructing and reconsecrating Japan's Shinto shrines. For Masuura, this old wood represents the tug of the past in the present. Yūbari King Melon The most expensive melon in the world is a status symbol in Japan. https://www.atlasobscura.com/foods/yubari-king-melon EXCERPT ... Fewer than 10,000 people remain in the sleepy former mining town of Yūbari on Japan's Hokkaido Island. A crippling financial crisis in the early 2000s drove nearly 90 percent of the town's population to seek residence elsewhere in the country. And that fiscal tragedy is crueler yet for the sad irony of the town's famous export: the Yūbari King melon, one of the most expensive fruits in the world. 2019/04/01about the forthcoming "ReiWa" nengo announced April 1Wikipedia already has posted the update:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_era_name [cf. in Japanese, https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%85%83%E5%8F%B7] "The new era Reiwa (令和)[1] is expected to start on 1 May 2019, the day when Emperor Akihito's elder son, Naruhito, is expected to ascend to the throne as the 126th Emperor of Japan" Not everyone knows that the name of each era does not have to match the years of the emperor or empress' reign, as in recent periods. The era-name was changed when natural disasters spoiled a given period, for example. By switching to a more favorable name, the idea was to change the fortunes of people's lives. Looking again at Wikipedia there is fuller discussion of the concept. Historical nengō
Prior to the Meiji period, era names were decided by court officials and were subjected to frequent change. A new era name was usually proclaimed within a year or two after the ascension of a new emperor. A new era name was also often designated on the first, fifth and 58th years of the sexagenary cycle, because they were inauspicious years in Onmyōdō. These three years are respectively known as kakurei, kakuun, and kakumei, and collectively known as sankaku. Era names were also changed due to other felicitous events or natural disasters.
In historical practice, the first day of a nengō (元年 gannen) starts whenever the emperor chooses; and the first year continues until the next lunar new year, which is understood to be the start of the nengō's second year 2019/03/21Japan Artisan (series) - short documentary about wasabi farmer (Shizuoka)"The freshest wasabi starts sweet and is followed by the spiciness." (subtitled in English) - documentary series on the subject of artisans in Japan.
2019/01/25sample 7 words of 43 selected Japanese words (new book by Mari Fujimoto)Sampling of 7 of the words featured in Mari Fujimoto's January 24, 2019 book.
Book link at amazon (Canada), Ikigai & Other Japanese Words to Live By Hardcover Mari Fujimoto (Author, Queens College, New York), Simon Winchester (Foreword), Michael Kenna (Photographer) https://www.amazon.ca/Ikigai-Other-Japanese-Words-Live/dp/19111308892019/01/23about Zainichi Koreans living in Japan for generations (new book announced)cross-posted from H-Japan with permission of the author, Jackie Kim-Wachutka. https://networks.h-net.org/node/20904/discussions/3580589/new-book-announce= ment-zainichi-korean-women-japan-voices excerpt, Featuring in-depth interviews from 1994 to the present, three generations of Zainichi Korean women-- those who migrated from colonial Korea before or during WWII and the Asia-Pacific War-- and their Japan-born descendants share their version of history, revealing their lives as members of an ethnic minority. Discovering voices within constricting patriarchal traditions, the women in this book are now able to tell their history. Ethnography, interviews, and the women's personal and creative writings offer an in-depth look into their intergenerational dynamics and provide a new way of exploring the hidden inner world of migrant women and the different ways displacement affects subsequent generations. 2019/01/09wedding documentary in Fukui-ken (34 minutes) Customs and planning for weddings in Japan have changed since the Showa period. But in Echizen-city the kimono merchants and downtown business association have come up with a fall event to attract visitors and local interest. The clothing and customs of parents and grandparents are put on display by preparing for a demonstration of the earlier styles and rituals. A colleague based in the area who used to work in TV news and entertainment keeps his skills sharp by producing short documentaries like this one. With his permission, here is the link for "Showa no Hanayome Gyoretsu" to enjoy the Japanese-only language track, https://youtu.be/7PiEP2IgjjQ 2019/01/04social changes - story about "monk ticketed for driving in Buddhist robes" As society changes and things get more complicated in Japan, this story illustrates what happens when high-tech police in Fukui-ken see a monk wearing his Buddhist robes and driving a car. =-=-=-=-=-= EXCERPT: ... ...Fukui Prefecture's regulations for enforcing the Road Traffic Law state that driving a vehicle in clothing that might affect safe driving is prohibited. The police officer is believed to have decided that the monk's robe violated this regulation and so cited him with a traffic ticket.
According to local reports, the monk was driving to a memorial service when he was stopped in Fukui on Sept. 16 around 10 a.m. The monk was told he could not wear kimono to drive and received a ticket with a ¥6,000 fine. The violation, according to the ticket, was "driving in attire that hinders vehicle operation."
The monk is refusing to pay the fine and said he would like to "clearly state at a trial that I can drive safely in a monk's robe." 2018/12/28video visit to Shikoku, "rural living in Japan" Here is one filmmaker's take on life outside the metro centers of Japan. =-=-=-=-=-= quoting boingboing.net this morning: Until the early 2000s more people lived in villages and small towns than in cities. Population in large cities continues to rise, while the opposite is true in rural areas. This is especially true in Japan, where people are fleeing from their rural homes to live in Tokyo and Osaka. Today 92% of Japanese live in large cities. In this video, Greg Lam, the host of Life Where I'm From, went to Japan's smallest island, Shikoku, to learn what living outside a megalopolis is like. 2018/12/08glimpes of life and language, video Clips: Fukui-ken, Kii Peninsula and Kansai area in 2018 and 1998 About 20 years ago I borrowed a camcorder and recorded interviews in English with Fukui-ken friends about several facets of social life. After Youtube became easy to use by so many people, I digitized the recordings to share online (see below). Then during my 2017 year in Japan I made a few more clips, mostly 2-3 minutes observations of events, rather than conversations. But a few weeks ago I made a short visit to see some of the same 1998 people whom I talked with. After 20 years we see things from a different perspective. Most clips are in English, but still have value to learners of Japanese, since social proficiency and cultural literacy are just as important as linguistic fluency and accuracy. One recording is with a former workmate in Fukui who has actively protested nuclear power each week at the kencho. That conversation is in Japanese. And as a curious experiment, one conversation illustrates Code Switching: we jump back and forth between Japanese and English. In my early days of learning Japanese it felt confusing to switch so freely, but now there feels like almost no boundary between the languages anymore. Maybe other non-native speakers have a similar experience, too. I will send this link to my social studies colleagues, too, but first I want to share the clips with students of Japanese life and language. -- W Video Clips: Fukui-ken, Kii Peninsula and Kansai area, http://bit.ly/clips2018jp 2018/10/19kami shibai & ningyo gekijo, traditional performance in photos & viideo clips Back in 2017 as part of an anniversary event for a Jodo-shu temple in Fukui-ken they hosted a Buddhist priest who has a combination road show - kamishibai and also puppet theater. Here are a few scenes to share with others. kamishibai frame and audience, https://www.flickr.com/photos/gpwitteveen/33460093082 video clip (2.5 minutes), opening scene, https://www.flickr.com/photos/anthroview/33487732021 puppet story: -young protagonist talks with wise priest, https://www.flickr.com/photos/anthroview/32774310484 -transformer demon (at first a meek human but now!), https://www.flickr.com/photos/anthroview/33576066156 -wise priest, https://www.flickr.com/photos/gpwitteveen/32774079664 -video clip, demon in disguise meets acolyte, https://www.flickr.com/photos/gpwitteveen/33604153865 -video clip, dramatic climax, https://www.flickr.com/photos/anthroview/33487725241 2018/10/12more films Re: Japanese culture, society and values through film[cross-posting from SenseiOnline yahoo group for teachers of Japanese language/culture] Thanks to T.P. for the initial question to senseionline about film titles with subtitles suitable for high school viewers. And thanks, too, for D.C. (below) for putting together a list to begin with. I would like to see the final choices for the students! But here is another way to answer the question: Before assigning movie titles to a given theme/category, how about first making a list of some features of Japanese society, culture, values to show and discuss. Then the possible scenes or full-length movies can be selected. Joy Hendry's book, Understanding Japanese Society, has been an important overview to life and language on the islands. She is revising the 2012 edition now for reprinting. The ToC would give a list of themes to examine through film. Some contexts would include, for example, Home culture School culture Workplace culture Counter-culture like citizen movements, protests, non-salaryman lives Combinations of traditional and modern/Western practices The land - before massive consumer economics, livelihoods were tied to coast, paddy, urban/merchant, and mountain conditions Life events, life cycle, religion and ceremony One big consideration is the teen audience, since some movie scenes or situations might not be suitable. Rich sources of social observation or commentary are the 1980s, 90s films directed by Itami; more recently the ones by Kore-eda. imdb.com and wikipedia sometimes give enough detail to make a decision about a film title, too. A great documentary from 1995 that shows how foreign ideas come to Japan and acquire local uses, meanings, and expression is "The Japanese Version" from www.cnam.com They make a full version (includes a chapter on love hotels) and a high school version (no love hotels). "Social Sketches of Japan" segments are online at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfc4C_JsrO37Rl2NBi6fJci09ls_478u3 Thu Oct 11, 2018 12:36 pm (PDT) . Posted by"Derek Chin" Here are some movies I came up with. The titles marked with a (?), I wasn't able to confirm myself: =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= On confronting death/the deceased: Departures / おくりびと After Life /ワンダフルライフ On dealing with suicide: [see also the documentary, "Saving 10,000" at tinyurl.com/saving10000 ] The Cross / 十字架 (?) On career/career change: Railways / 49歳で電車の運転士になった男の物語 On parenthood/family: Like Father, Like Son /そして父になる (?) On school bullying / disability: A Silent Voice /聲の形 On depression: My SO Has Got Depression / ツレがうつになりまして。 On international cooperation: We Can't Change the World. But, We Wanna Build a School in Cambodia /僕たちは世界を変えることができない2018/10/03article about Shojin Ryori - temple foods The people in Brooklyn, NY at ATLAS OBSCURA has lots of Japan articles, but among their new food-centric project, GASTRO OBSCURA, there is this article about (non-meat) temple foods, https://www.atlasobscura.com/foods/shojin-ryori-japanese-temple-cuisine 2018/09/20series from video bloggers based in Nagoya
Article at bbc.com showcases 6 years of the vlog from a husband-wife team on their Youtube Channel, "Rachel and Jun."
===Story excerpt:
They're all created by Nagoya-based husband-and-wife vlogging duo Rachel and Jun Yoshizuki, who run the YouTube channel Rachel and Jun. Their on-the-ground accounts of daily life in Japan have been viewed more than 200 million times.
Full article, http://www.bbc.com/capital/story/20180919-the-vlogging-duo-on-youtube-who-teach-the-world-about-japan
2018/08/14family names - 26 readings for "Niu"This JapanTimes article describes the logic, variations, and patterns among surnames in Japan these days. The extreme example is the 2-character family name with kanji for 'ship' and 'alive' with 26 ways to read it, from Nioi to Mibu, according to the article. 2018/08/03photo-essay from Kobe: one-room family lifeMost documentaries these days seem to be mainly video. But the older medium of still photos, with its unnatural frozen moment, allows careful study and reflection. This story of a big family in a small space shows readers something of Japanese society that seldom attracts attention. With the forces squeezing the middle-class ever smaller and expanding the proportion of people with few resources, this story is a timely one; probably similar stories can be pictured in many of the G-20 societies, too. https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/a-japanese-photographers-view-of-life-in-his-familys-one-room-home 2018/07/30the 13 Buddhist deitiescross-posting today from H-Japan email list: Monday, July 30, 2018 ...a Condensed Visual Classroom Guide titled:
Summary: The Thirteen Buddhist Deities (Jūsanbutsu 十三仏) are a purely Japanese convention. The standardized group of thirteen emerged in the mid-14th century, but in its formative years (12th & 13th centuries), the group's composition varied significantly and included only ten, eleven, or twelve members. The group is important to all schools of Japanese Buddhism. Even today, the thirteen are invoked at thirteen postmortem rites held by the living for the dead, and at thirteen premortem rites held by the living for the living. As shown herein, the thirteen are associated with the Seven Seventh-Day Rites 七七斎, the Six Realms of Karmic Rebirth 六道, the Buddhas of the Ten Days of Fasting 十斎日仏, the Ten Kings of Hell 十王, the Secret Buddhas of the Thirty Days of the Month 三十日秘仏, and other groupings. The Thirteen provide early examples of Japan's medieval honji-suijaku 本地垂迹 paradigm, wherein local deities (suijaku) are recognized as avatars of the Buddhist deities (honji). This classroom guide is unique in three ways: (1) it presents over 70 annotated images, arranged chronologically and thematically, from the 12th to 20th century, including extant art outside Japan; (2) it offers four methods to easily identify the individual deities; and (3) it provides visual evidence that the thirteen are configured to mimic the layout of the central court of the Womb World Mandala 中台八葉院. █ KEYWORDS. 十三仏 or 十三佛・十王・七七斎・七七日・中有・中陰・六齋日・六道 ・十斎日仏・三十日秘仏・本地垂迹 ・兵範記・中有記・ 預修十王生七経 ・地蔵十王経 ・佛説地藏菩薩發心因縁十王經・弘法大師逆修日記事 ・下学集. █The Adobe PDF version is printable and searchable. The web version is not.
Contents of the Slideshow:
Mark Schumacher, Independent Researcher, Kamakura, Japan Discussion published by Mark Schumacher on Saturday, July 28, 2018
2018/07/25curious and mostly useful to know - 50 things about JapanThis 11 minute Youtube has some surprises even for long-time Japan residents, it seems! 2018/07/16article about role-play (Rental Family Members; letter from Tokyo) There is some good food for thought in the examples here: families who have temporary need of a person to fill in a role for their family circumstances.
Letter from Tokyo - April 30, 2018 Issue. Japan's Rent-a-Family Industry People who are short on relatives can hire a husband, a mother, a grandson. The resulting relationships can be more real than you'd expect. By Elif Batuman, https://www.newyorker.com/
2018/07/02real estate worldview in Japan - land holds value, but structure as consumableRecent story that contrasts the Japanese experience of building or buying ready-made residential property, rather than to seek previously owned houses to remodel or rennovate, https://www.rethinktokyo.com/2018/06/06/depreciate-limited-life-span-japanese-home/1527843245
2018/05/18How many women writers of Japan do you know?A recent article at Japan-Times introduces some of the writers of Japan and ends by announcing a series of feature stories, beginning in June. For many of us, this will be a chance to expand our own cultural literacy & social proficiency.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = A series exploring female writers of Japan will be published on the third Sunday of the month, starting in June. Where would we be without the words of Japanese women? BY KRIS KOSAKA, CONTRIBUTING WRITER 2018/02/23photo story, National Geographic Magazine & "hiki komori" shut-insThe February 2018 edition of NGM includes a story of interest to Japan observers & students:
Pictures Reveal the Isolated Lives of Japan's Social Recluses A photographer explores the hidden world of the hikikomori, and the human bonds that draw them out.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/photography/proof/2018/february/japan-hikikomori-isolation-society/ 2017/12/25time traveler - old photos around JapanHere is a collection of early color photos taken in postwar by GHQ staffers,
excerpt: The National Diet Library in Tokyo caught attention this autumn when it published color photos taken immediately after the end of World War II by a staffer at the General Headquarters (GHQ).
For even older visual history, browse these photos copied from Library of Congress in Washington, DC at the Prints and Photograph room, http://old-japanphotos.wikispaces.com/ (and the companion project for comparison, http://old-koreaphotos.wikispaces.com/ )
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