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In the world of eighteenth-century Japan, during the famous Edo period, an orphaned ten-year-old Japanese girl named Noriko lives with her six adopted aunts in a geisha house, one that is a haven for homeless cats. As she grows up, she experiences the well-known arts and spiritual expression of that time period. Offering a child’s perspective, this guide presents an exploration of Japanese history and the culture of the Edo period. Learn about the rise of the samurai warriors and their leader, the shogun. The time period also witnessed the rise of Kabuki theater, Bunraku puppetry, ukiyo-e painting, the way of tea, and a unique form of poetry called haiku. These arts had a profound effect on Noriko, who practiced both the native religion of Shinto and Buddhism. Noriko become famous for her woodblock prints of cats and flowers and her haiku. This narrative history invites young readers to get to know a new culture and gain knowledge of the wider world and its history.
For more than 25 years Noriko Morishita has studied and practised the intricate rules of the famous Japanese Tea Ceremony, trying to master its complexities in order to find inner peace. In this vivid account of her experience of the universal trials and triumphs of adulthood, Morishita connects the core tenets of this ancient art with leading a fulfilling life, showing how we too may use mindfulness to achieve happiness.
'Late Spring, directed and co-written by Yasujiro Ozu, was released in 1949, which makes it an old film, or a film that has been new for a long time...' So begins this remarkable essay in narrative reconstruction, which elicits a world of meanings from the reticences of one classic Japanese movie, and reserves to the very end a resolution of its mystery. Adam Mars-Jones gives a virtuoso comeback performance as that lost figure from the earl days of cinema: the film explainer. There has never been a film book like this one.
A dark, fast paced fairy tale of action packed adventures in perilous lands. In our world before men, the finding of a mysterious, bewitched fairy princess called Noriko starts a catastrophic chain of events that lay a fatal curse upon the kingdom that saved her. The unique tree blessed with the still beating heart of a shooting star that protects the kingdom has been slain of its power and is dead. Ten ancient scrolls of immense power must be found as they are the only chance to give the tree rebirth and save the magical kingdom. But the scrolls are hidden far away in a perfect prison beyond reach and protected by a powerful, ancient magic. Thus, Noriko's journey to retrieve the scrolls and save the kingdom unfolds. From the point of destruction she will rise to ultimately discover who she really is. For Noriko is the catalyst to the scrolls themselves and the falling of the kingdom she must now save. Why has this happened? Who is responsible? Why are the scrolls imprisoned? What monsters await? What secrets wait to be uncovered?
Noriko is a gorgeous, shy Japanese flight attendant: waifishly thin, with long, black hair, and a perfectly cute face. She badly needs a man to love her. She'd looked for boyfriends in her English conversation club and her yoga class, but she hasn't been able to find a man to give her the love she craves. Meanwhile, despite her long work hours as a flight attendant, she's having trouble paying off her father's Yakuza debts. Before boarding a flight from Tokyo to San Francisco, Noriko receives a mysterious business card from a trenchcoated stranger. The business card has a phone number in San Francisco, along with an unusual offer. In San Francisco, Noriko finds a matchmaker, an all-knowing cat, and a night of hot, searing passion with a billionaire.
Presenting a vivid social history of “the new woman” who emerged in Japanese culture between the world wars, The New Japanese Woman shows how images of modern women burst into Japanese life in the midst of the urbanization, growth of the middle class, and explosion of consumerism resulting from the postwar economic boom, particularly in the 1920s. Barbara Sato analyzes the icons that came to represent the new urban femininity—the “modern girl,” the housewife, and the professional working woman. She describes how these images portrayed in the media shaped and were shaped by women’s desires. Although the figures of the modern woman by no means represented all Japanese women, they d...
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No work and a lot of play... 888 is a whimsical glimpse at detective life at a new Private Eye agency. The problem is, detective Mori Shimeki, his pet Pomeranian and fellow investigators can't get a single case. Volume one consists of eight episodes of laid-back detective stories that include Shimeki's past (his ex-wife, his long-lost brother), the measures he takes to get more clients and the everyday life at their workplace.
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A collection of essays by an international cast of scholars, experts, and fans, providing a definitive, one-stop Manga resource.