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Japanorama is a series of documentaries presented by Jonathan Ross, exploring various facets of popular culture and trends of modern-day Japan. Each episode has a theme, around which Ross presents cultural phenomenon, films, music, and art that exemplify facets of Japan.
Women and public life in early Meiji Japan: The development of the feminist movement (U of Michigan Press, 2020). ASIN 192928067X; Robins-Mowry, Dorothy. The hidden sun: Women of modern Japan (Westview Press, 1983) ASIN 0865314217; Sato, Barbara. The New Japanese Woman: Modernity, Media, and Women in Interwar Japan (Duke UP, 2003). ASIN 0822330083
Traditional Music in Modern Life July 11, 2017 47 Japanophiles: Nsenda Lukumwena July 18, 2017 48 Urban Renewal August 1, 2017 49 Fireworks August 15, 2017 50 Anthropomorphism August 22, 2017 51 2D Characters: Origins and Evolution August 29, 2017 52 Children and Sports September 5, 2017 53 Amusement Parks September 12, 2017 54
Modern girls were depicted as living in the cities, being financially and emotionally independent, choosing their own suitors, and apathetic towards politics. [3] The woman's magazine was a novelty at this time, and the modern girl was the model consumer, someone more often found in advertisements for cosmetics and fashion than in real life.
Beautiful Life - starring Takuya Kimura, Takako Tokiwa, and Koyuki; Food Fight - starring Tsuyoshi Kusanagi, Kyoko Fukada, Rie Miyazawa, and Takuya Kimura; The 6th Sayoko (六番目の小夜子) - starring Suzuki Anne, Chiaki Kuriyama, Takayuki Yamada, Ryo Katsuji, and Marika Matsumoto
All episodes survive in the NHK archives, recovered from off-air recordings. 21 Otei-chan (おていちゃん) (Otei-chan) 3 April 1978 30 September 1978 Starring Chikako Yuri in a dramatization of the life of Sadako Sawamura. Ten episodes survive in the NHK archives. 22 Watashi wa umi (わたしは海) (I Am the Sea) 2 October 1978 31 March 1979
Japan's demographic woes are forcing it down a path taken years earlier by its U.S. ally, which lifted a ban on women on warships in 1993. Japan's women sailors serve on frontline of gender ...
The show is primarily set in Tokyo, Japan. It is a co-production between HBO Asia and Hulu Japan. [2] Both the main characters, based on Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson, are played by women, Yuko Takeuchi and Shihori Kanjiya respectively [2] and it is the first major series to cast a woman as Holmes. [3]