Google翻訳
A Dog's Guide to Tokyo is a photo collection by Japan's leading photographer, Eikoh Hosoe. Along with Tomatsu Shomei, Narahara Ikko, and Ishimoto Yasuhiro, Eikoh Hosoe is one of the pioneers of the golden age of Japanese photography, active since the 1950s after the war. He is well known for his avant-garde photographs, rich in experimental expression, such as Man and Woman and Ordeal by Roses, but he also released works with completely different concepts in the 1960s. His works include Why, Mother, Why? (1965) (Japanese title: Mother's Fool), which depicts the resilient life of a girl who has lost her mother, and Taka-chan and IA Dog's Journey to Japan (1967), which he co-authored with American female writer Betty Jean Lifton and inserted Hosoe's illustrations into a fairy tale about a boy and a dog's great adventure. This book was published in 1969. Like its predecessor, this book was co-authored with Lifton and is a unique guidebook that introduces the culture and culture of various parts of Japan from the perspective of a silver poodle named Jumblie.