Encyclopedia of Japan: Japanese History and Culture, from Abacus to ZoriFacts on File, 1991 - 410 ページ Less comprehensive and more popularly written than the nine-volume Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan ( LJ 1/84), this single-volume work is nevertheless a valuable reference source. It is extremely current, including entries on such recent topics as the Recruit political scandal and current prime minister Kaifu Toshiki. While the articles in the Kodansha Encyclopedia are written by experts in the field and provide bibliographic references with nearly all of the entries, the present work is authored entirely by Perkins, whom the publisher identifies as ``an educator specializing in Buddhism and Japanese culture,'' and has only a general bibliography at the end. For its more comprehensive treatment, especially of historical topics and traditional culture, the Kodansha remains a standard source, but for its currency and value as a ready reference tool the Perkins volume will be a useful acquisition for most libraries as well. Its single-volume format and lower cost make it an excellent acquisition for smaller libraries.-- Scott Wright, Univ. of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minn. - Library Journal. |
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ancient Ashikaga Shogunate bamboo became Buddhist Buddhist temples calligraphy capital city castle Chinese city of Kyoto clan color companies CORPORATION culture daimyo dance decorated developed Diet Edo Era emperor famous FESTIVAL feudal fish flowers foreign Fujiwara garden geisha Genji Heian Heian Era Honshu Island House imperial court INDUSTRY ink painting introduced into Japan Japa Japanese government Kabuki Kamakura Shogunate kami kimono known Korea Kyoto Kyushu Island Meiji government Meiji Restoration military Minamoto Nara nese Nihon Noh drama Oda Nobunaga Okinawa Osaka Party poetry political popular pottery Prefecture prime minister Province Pure Land religious Restoration of 1868 rice Rikyu RYUKYU ISLANDS sacred samurai Satsuma sauce SECT OF BUDDHISM SEN NO RIKYU Shinto shrines style sword Taira tea ceremony Tendai Tokugawa Ieyasu Tokugawa Shogunate Tokyo Toyotomi Hideyoshi trade traditional Japanese treaty Western women World World War II Yamato ZEN SECT