日本首都-东京
Tokyo (Japan) Cherry blossoms signal the beginning of spring.The sheer level of energy is the most striking aspect of Japan's capital city. While it's true the city has a somewhat depressing shortcoming- shoebox housing estates and office blocks traversed by overhead expressways crowded with traffic - Tokyo remains a glittering example of the 'miracle' of post-WWII Japan. Despite mega-construction, the average Tokyo suburb hasn't fallen prey to supermarket culture yet: streets are lined with tiny specialist shops and bustling restaurants, most of which stay open late into the night. Close to the soaring office blocks exist pockets of another Tokyo - an old wooden house, a Japanese inn, an old lady in a kimono (和服)sweeping the pavement outside her home with a straw broom. More than anything else, Tokyo is a place where the urgent rhythms of consumer culture collide with the quieter moments that linger from older traditions.Major attractions in Tokyo: Ginza(银座):Despite its disaster-ridden history and propensity for shape-changing, Ginza has become synonymous with conspicuous consumption and excessive shopping. At the end of the 19th century, after fire razed it to the ground, it was ressurected with brick buildings and wide boulevards that mimicked(模仿) the Champs Elysses. Shinjuku (新宿):The Shinjuku district is, without doubt, the most vigorous part of Tokyo; two million people per day pass through Shinjuku station alone. The two sides - east and west - sit side-by-side in mutual harmony; west Shinjuku is the staid commercial hub of the city, while the east is its colourful and exotic (异国情调的;奇特的)counterpart. The west is planned, administrative and skyscrapped, while the east side is rambling (杂乱的), chaotic and full of fast-food shops and pawn shops. |