History is not necessarily a limited account. From time to time, the ability to understand and fully understand past events and relationships requires storytelling. It may be difficult to communicate the past ability as effectively as possible to past people. In the case of close agreement between novels and facts, people easily connect to history by feeling emotional connections. In this article, I will use some of the best rummy stories of Junichiro Tanizaki and Andrew Gordon's historical records of contemporary Japanese history.
I just read Tanizaki Junichiro's "Some Prefers Nettles" again. This is a novel by the 1920s about marital divorce. It is an ambiguous and subtle masterpiece that conveys emotional and cultural dilemmas through painful poetry, which only makes you happy being a member of humanity.
Tanizaki's novel, especially Tade kuu mushi (1929; Some Pret Nettles) often conflict between traditional Japanese and Western style. In his earlier work, he also claimed to prefer the West side. Takizaki changed its view after moving to the Kansai region after the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923, and his work traced the old Japanese culture that he refused before. Between 1939 and 1941, Taniaki announced his first of three contemporary language versions of the Genji language. Because of his infinite praise of the best works of Japanese literature he thinks he is willing to sacrifice his professional career for years.
Many Japanese people are dissatisfied with the spread of the city in Tokyo due to the sea and population of concrete. One example is Junichiro Tanizaki, a Japanese novelist in the early 20th century. Tanizaki is known for his sharp and unusual mental state inspired by the work of Charles Baudelaire. Board rail proposed the concept of "stroller of town gentleman" and "botanical walker of sidewalk" and named this position as flaneur. Flaneur's idea is to help you understand Paris through what is happening in the particular place of the resident and what is happening in the urban environment and to combine history, anthropology, literature and sociology of the public with individuals. Flanaur is a passive personality, looking at the city one-sidedly