About this Guide/Book Vendor Information

 

 

A note about calendrical systems in Japan:

Years can be written in Japanese using two different formats:

1. Japanese imperial era names (nengō 年号)

2. Western calendar years (properly called Gregorian calendar years; e.g., 2005). 

Japanese imperial era names refer to the name of the Emperor followed by the year in kanji (Chinese characters) or Arabic numerals and the kanji for "year" (nen). For example, 2005 is Heisei 17, and can be written in Japanese as 平成17年 or 平成十七年.

The Western calendar was introduced in Japan in 1873, but not all publications have used it. Click here for a useful Japanese Year converter.

This guide to Japanese Image Resources at Duke includes notes on which resources use only the Japanese calendar, which use only the Western calendar, and which use both.

Book Vendor Information:

Not satisfied with merely checking out these resources from Duke? Do want them for your very own? Or maybe you're at a different institution and want to get them at your library? Consult the Ordering Japanese Books (located on the EAC webpages for Japanese Studies Resources at Duke Univ.) created by Dr. Kristina Kade Troost, for book dealers in Japan and the US.

 

Kagaku suru kazoku... Osaka Puck cartoon, 1941.

 

 

"Kagaku suru kazoku..." cartoon from Osaka Puck, 1941. From Manga ni egakareta Meiji, Taishō, Shōwa, p. 193.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This Web Guide to Japanese Image Resources at Duke was created by Alison Raab, an MSLS student at the School of Information and Library Science, at UNC Chapel Hill. It was created as a project for JPN 291, Japanese Studies Research Methods, taught at Duke University by Dr. Troost, the Japan/Korea Librarian and Head of International and Area Studies at Perkins Library, Duke. Suggestions and comments welcome. Contact Alison at Alison.Raab@duke.edu.

30-Oct-2005