Japan Braille Library Explained

35.7109°N 139.7047°W is a special private library in Tokyo, Japan, serving individuals who are unable to read standard printed material, and those who research the field of visual impairment. JBL is one of the biggest and oldest libraries for the blind in Japan.[1] The library's collection includes about 81,000 braille books (23,000 titles), 210,000 talking books (24,000 titles), and various documents concerning the blind and braille. JBL also provides a braille transcription service, a braille printing service, a recording service, digital library services, PC training programs, braille training programs, and sells about 1,200 products for the blind. The library's services now extend beyond Japan, providing braille textbooks and computer training to developing Asian nations.[2]

Chronology

Services & Projects

  • Braille books lending
  • Talking books (DAISY books, audio cassette books, audio CD books) lending
  • Reference service
  • Face-to-face reading service
  • Braille transcription service
  • Braille printing service
  • Publication of braille books
  • Recording service
  • Production of talking books
  • Production of audio guide for DVD movies
  • Digital library service (broadband network delivery service of DAISY books)
  • PC training programs
  • Braille training programs
  • Shop of the products for the blind
  • Support project for the blind libraries in Asia

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: History . Japan Braille Library.
  2. Web site: 'Nitten' is no mere Braille library . The Japan Times . 2010-12-19.