| Apr 5, 2011

Letting radiation leak, but never information

March 2011 has shaken Japan to the core. The earthquake, tsunami and nuclear incident in Fukushima have given the world cause to pause and reflect on the fragility and hubris of human existence. My condolences to the victims, and their families and friends. But ...

Charisma Men, unite against the identity enforcers

| Mar 1, 2011

Charisma Men, unite against the identity enforcers

English teachers in Japan get a bum rap. Not always taken seriously as professionals, and often denied advancement opportunities in the workplace, they are seen as people over here on a lark. They get accused of taking advantage of Japanese society to earn easy ...

Naturalized Japanese: foreigners no more

| Feb 1, 2011

Naturalized Japanese: foreigners no more

In Dec. 28′s Japan Times, Charles Lewis wrote a respectful Zeit Gist column asking three fellow wise men (sumo wrestler Konishiki, musicologist Peter Barakan and Diet member Marutei Tsurunen) about their successful lives as “foreigners” in Japan. Despite their combined century of experience here, ...

Jan 4, 2011

Arudou’s Alien Almanac: 2000-2010

No. 5: The Otaru onsen case (’99-2005) This lawsuit followed the landmark Ana Bortz case of 1999, where a Brazilian plaintiff sued and won against a jewelry store in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture, that denied her entry for looking foreign. Since Japan has no national ...

Arudou’s Alien Almanac: 2010

| Jan 4, 2011

Arudou’s Alien Almanac: 2010

No. 5: Renho joins Kan’s Cabinet Japanese politicians with international roots are few but not unprecedented. But Taiwanese- Japanese Diet member Renho’s ascension to the Cabinet as minister for administrative reforms has been historic. Requiring the bureaucrats to justify their budgets (famously asking last ...

| Dec 7, 2010

MOFA gets E for effort in ‘with or without U’ farce

My Japanese passport expired last month, meaning I’ve been a citizen here for a full decade now. Hooray. This should have occasioned thoughts on what’s changed in Japan for the better. Instead I got to see how inflexible Japan’s bureaucracy remains. Consider what happened ...

| Nov 2, 2010

‘Homogeneous,’ ‘unique’ myths stunt discourse

Last month I attended an international lecture by one of Japanology’s senior scholars. I’ll call him Dr. Frink. Decorated by the Japanese government for his contributions to the field, he talked about Japan as a “unique” state that never really changes, even as it ...

| Oct 5, 2010

Census blind to Japan’s true diversity

It’s that time of the decade again. By now, all households in Japan should have received and submitted Japan’s National Census (kokusei chosa), a survey taken every five years expressly to assist in policymaking, drawing up electoral districts and other matters of taxation and ...