@rogzilla71 For those interested, the guidebook this comes from is scanned in its entirety at the National Diet Library of Japan: https://t.co/595d3uI5nx
Tall buildings in Chicago gave a huge surprise to one Japanese girl who visited the United States in the early 20th century.
https://t.co/jil8JfaXEX https://t.co/2wtJHKTjAg
Pioneering work for #JapaneseStudies.This book is one of the earliest works as a full-scale translation and reproduction of Japanese literature in Europe. Translated by Austrian oriental scholar August Pfizmaier; published in 1847, Vienna. #ndldigital https://t.co/8X82sIhXMn https://t.co/1XA2UVmWqE
How terrifying! A woman’s voice is counting dishes—one, two, three, four…. This is a well-known ghost story in Japan. Read this article to get the full story. #ndldigital https://t.co/NH3ZMYOeyd https://t.co/MC8wzefHRX