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A Handbook of Modern Japan

Chapter 15: BIBLIOGRAPHY.
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About This Book

The work surveys Japan’s physical geography, economy, transport, daily life, customs, and national character, then reviews both older and modern history alongside constitutional, local, and legal institutions. It examines religion, philosophy, literature, education, aesthetics, social change, and the role of women, and it assesses Japan’s international position including wartime and expansion topics. The author presents social transformation as largely government-directed, with conservative popular attitudes contrasted against progressive official reforms. Organized into concise chapters with maps, illustrations, and bibliographies, the volume functions as a compact handbook offering an overview of contemporary conditions and references for further study.

BIBLIOGRAPHY.

There are many good books which portray the manners and customs of the Japanese people; and as for magazine and newspaper articles on the subject their name is legion. The works of Griffis, Chamberlain, Rein, Hearn, Lowell, Miss Bacon, Miss Scidmore, Miss Hartshorne, Mrs. Isabella Bird Bishop, and Mitford’s “Tales of Old Japan” may be recommended. Good novels, like “Mito Yashiki” (Maclay), “Honda the Samurai” (Griffis), “In the Mikado’s Service” (Griffis), etc., give an insight into Japanese life. This may suffice, as more particular references have been given in connection with many of the topics of the chapter. “A Japanese Boy” (Shigemi), “When I was a Boy in Japan” (Shioya), “Japanese Girls and Women” (Miss Bacon), and “The Wee Ones of Japan” (Mrs. Bramhall) give good pictures of child-life; and Dr. Griffis has edited an edition of Mrs. Chaplin-Ayrton’s valuable “Child-Life in Japan.” “Japanese Life in Town and Country” (Knox), and “Every Day Japan” (Lloyd) also contain good material in this connection.