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  • Writer's pictureBrittany Tignor

Japanese Empire


  • Asia for Educators: Columbia University. An initiative of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute at Columbia University, Asia for Educators (AFE) is designed to serve faculty and students in world history, culture, geography, art, and literature at the undergraduate and pre-college levels. This collection includes primary source sets designed around document based questions.

  • 1750 to 1919: An Age of Revolutions: Columbia University. An initiative of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute at Columbia University, Asia for Educators (AFE) is designed to serve faculty and students in world history, culture, geography, art, and literature at the undergraduate and pre-college levels. This collection includes links to primary sources across the web.

  • National Archives of JAPAN. Primary sources along with description in English.

  • The-Noh.com. "Noh, the traditional Japanese performing art that has been recognized as a world cultural heritage. The site “the-noh.com” is your gateway to this unique and profound art with over six hundred years of history."

  • Noh as Intermedia: Stanford University. "This project is intended to contribute to the understanding and appreciation of Noh by offering in-depth intermedia analysis of two plays, introductions to elements of Noh, and a general discussion about Noh as intermedia."

  • Unpinning History: Japanese Posters in the Age of Commercialism, Imperialism, and Modernism: University of Southern California Libraries. "Highlights USC Libraries' unique collection of Japanese posters that were produced in the 1910s and 1920s."


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