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قراءة كتاب Japanese Girls and Women Revised and Enlarged Edition

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Japanese Girls and Women
Revised and Enlarged Edition

Japanese Girls and Women Revised and Enlarged Edition

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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By Alice M. Bacon

IN THE LAND OF THE GODS. 12mo, $1.50.

JAPANESE GIRLS AND WOMEN. 16mo, $1.25. In Riverside Library for Young People. 16mo, 75 cents.

Holiday Edition. With 12 full-page Illustrations in color and 43 outline drawings by Japanese artists. Crown 8vo, gilt top, $4.00.

A JAPANESE INTERIOR. 16mo, $1.25. In Riverside School Library. 16mo, 60 cents, net.

HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
Boston and New York

JAPANESE GIRLS AND
WOMEN

BY
ALICE MABEL BACON
REVISED AND ENLARGED EDITION

BOSTON AND NEW YORK
HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
The Riverside Press Cambridge

Copyright, 1891, 1902,
By ALICE MABEL BACON.

All rights reserved.

To
STEMATZ, THE MARCHIONESS OYAMA,
IN THE NAME OF OUR GIRLHOOD'S FRIENDSHIP, UNCHANGED AND UNSHAKEN BY THE CHANGES AND SEPARATIONS OF OUR MATURER YEARS,
This Volume
IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED.

CONTENTS.

CHAPTER PAGE
I. Childhood 1
II. Education 37
III. Marriage and Divorce 57
IV. Wife and Mother 84
V. Old Age 119
VI. Court Life 138
VII. Life in Castle and Yashiki 169
VIII. Samurai Women 196
IX. Peasant Women 228
X. Life in the Cities 262
XI. Domestic Service 299
XII. Within the Home 327
XIII. Ten Years of Progress 371
Appendix 423
Index 473

PREFACE TO REVISED EDITION.

In offering a revised edition of a book which has been before the public for more than ten years, there is little to say that has not been said in the original Preface. The work as published before, however, was always, to its author's mind, unfinished, for the reason that a chapter on household customs, which was necessary for the completion of the plan, had to be omitted because it could not be written in America.

This defect has now been remedied, and the chapter "Within the Home" contains the supplementary matter necessary to complete the picture of a Japanese woman's life. In addition to this a thorough revision has been made of the whole book, and the subjects discussed in each chapter have been brought up to date by means of notes in an Appendix. The reader will find these notes referred to by asterisks in the text.

Finally, a second supplementary chapter has been added, in which an effort has been made to analyze present conditions. From its nature, this chapter is only a rapid survey of the progress of ten years. It is not easy to write with judgment of conditions actually present. A little perspective is necessary to make sure that one sees things in their proper proportions. It is therefore with some hesitation that I offer to the public the result of two years' experience of the present state of affairs. If subsequent events show that my observation has been incorrect, I can only say that what I have written has been the "Thing-as-I-see-It," and does not lay claim to being the "Thing-as-It-is."

In closing, I would thank once more the friends whose names appear in the previous Preface, and would add to their number the names

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