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Car bomb kills dozens outside Shiite mosque in Karachi

Asia Pacific

Car bomb kills dozens outside Shiite mosque in Karachi

by No Author

AP A car bomb exploded outside a mosque Sunday, killing at least 37 people and wounding another 141 in a mostly Shiite Muslim neighborhood in the southern Pakistan city of Karachi — the third mass-casualty attack on the minority sect in the country this ...

  • Tokyo readies for crucial Olympic evaluation tour
  • Egypt soldiers in fatal clashes with Port Said protesters
  • Politicians hit lethal U.S. aid for new Egypt
  • Meet the new boss
  • Authorities investigate Akita line bullet train derailment
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Roger Pulvers

Fever from the fields

by No Author

At least five people in Japan have died of severe fever from thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS), a virus infection said to be transmitted by ticks.

  • Exiting a wounded church
  • Ballast for Australia-India relations
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  • Pope Benedict XVI bows out
  • Improving relations with Russia
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Tense times in Japan’s relationships with its neighbors

Language | BILINGUAL

Tense times in Japan’s relationships with its neighbors

by Michael Hoffman

It's a dangerous, unpredictable world. Twice in January Chinese warships in the East China Sea challenged Japan's Maritime Self Defense Forces patrols in a manner deemed threatening. And on Feb. 12 came North Korea's nuclear test.

  • Green turns black as Europe burns up cheap U.S. coal
  • China reluctant to accept Japan’s support over toxic smog: minister
  • Battling the postpartum blues
  • Documenting the gender imbalance
  • Making life easier for working moms
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Everything you wanted to know about Western women (but were afraid to ask): No-holds-barred guide targets Japanese men

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT

Everything you wanted to know about Western women (but were afraid to ask): No-holds-barred guide targets Japanese men

by Kaori Shoji

Here's an open secret: Japanese men have a bad international reputation on the romance front.

  • Noh performances in Kyoto to benefit Tohoku
  • What ever ‘appened to the Tamagotchi?
  • All lost in the lost-and-found
  • Teacher cultivates more bilingual education opportunities for children
  • Romania envoy hopes cultural affinity boosts ties
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‘A person and a possession’: Japanese women in history

Review

‘A person and a possession’: Japanese women in history

by Kris Kosaka

SELLING WOMEN: Prostitution, Markets and the Household in Early Modern Japan, by Amy Stanley. University of California Press, 2012, 282 pp., $49.95 (hardcover) In the vast cultural landscape, Japan fascinates the mainstream with manga and anime, the martial arts, Zen and kimono. Of course, ...

  • Sensual poetry on love, marriage
  • Chinese ink new future for 1,000-year tradition
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Maeda regains pitching form, holds China scoreless for five innings

Baseball | World Baseball Classic

Maeda regains pitching form, holds China scoreless for five innings

Kenta Maeda shook off worries about his form with five shutout innings as Japan beat China 5-2 in first-round Pool A of the World Baseball Classic on Sunday at Fukuoka Dome. Japan improved to 2-0 following a tough win over Brazil in Saturday evening’s ...

  • Noah, Boozer steer Bulls past Nets
  • Kipruto wins Lake Biwa Marathon
  • Pens outslug Habs in OT
  • Japan struggling to deliver on mound
  • Teen phenom Takanashi soars to victory in Miyasama International
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Commentary | COUNTERPOINT Jun 5, 2011

Doomed self-obsessive remains iconic to some in the Japan of today

“It’s not that I’m weak, it’s that the suffering weighs down on me too heavily.” This was said, in 1938, by a writer whose life and death bring together crowds all around the country every year on June 19 in rituals of celebration and ...

Commentary | COUNTERPOINT May 29, 2011

Japanese genius shines eclectic in its extravagant simplicities of style

“Live your era, surmount your era!” With these words, written in 1935, the young woodblock artist Yoshio Fujimaki gave out a cry for genius. Certainly his words apply to the genius of Bob Dylan (whose 70th birthday was celebrated on these pages last week), ...

Commentary | COUNTERPOINT May 15, 2011

Recalling a generation, and more, sold out by the U.S. masters of war

Next month there will be a celebration in Los Angeles that I very much regret having to miss. It is a reunion of my high school graduating class of 1961. The Class of ’61 at Alexander Hamilton High School was, in some ways, quite ...

Commentary | COUNTERPOINT May 8, 2011

Hisashi Inoue’s great legacy is just the ticket to inspire our best efforts

A beautiful cherry-blossom tree stands right beside the sento (public bath) I religiously go to, and its top branch hangs over an opening in the roof. In early April, petals were falling from the branch down into the water, which comes out of the ...

Commentary | COUNTERPOINT May 1, 2011

It is time to target who calls the shots in Japan when disaster strikes

Why did it take so long for any Japanese Cabinet ministers to make their presence felt on the site of the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant — and what does this tell us about the decision-making process in Japan? On April 9, ...

Commentary | COUNTERPOINT Apr 24, 2011

Fantasy really is reality in many aspects of Japanese life and culture

People around the world are bewitched by Japanese fantasy. From East, Southeast and South Asia to Europe east and west, the United States and Latin America, it is now mostly anime and manga that draw young people to the study of Japan and the ...

Commentary | COUNTERPOINT Apr 17, 2011

In this time of trials, a new nationalism would aid Japan’s recovery

The worst form of bondage is the bondage of dejection, which keeps men hopelessly chained in loss of faith in themselves.” So wrote, nearly a century ago, the Bengali poet, author, musician — and Nobel Prize in Literature laureate -Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) in an ...

Commentary | COUNTERPOINT Apr 10, 2011

Could Japan’s tragedy help forge some overdue reconciliations?

The Tohoku-Kanto earthquake and tsunami of March 11 has altered the relationship between Japan and its neighbors, particularly the relationship with China. Given the sympathy for the plight of hundreds of thousands of residents of the Tohoku region of northeast Japan, the Chinese media’s ...

Commentary | COUNTERPOINT Apr 3, 2011

Japan’s reaction to Fukushima may point to a better way of living

One day in September 1923, the great writer and poet of the Tohoku region, Kenji Miyazawa, went into woods not far from his hometown of Hanamaki in Iwate Prefecture to chop down a tree. Suddenly rocks broke away from the cliff, rocks he called ...

Commentary | COUNTERPOINT Mar 27, 2011

Japan’s crises spark wide alarm and some unlikely sympathizers

The outpouring of goodwill toward Japanese people since the triple calamities of March 11′s earthquake and tsunami and subsequent nuclear crises has overwhelmed the nation. There is generally so much indifference to — and criticism of — Japan in the West and parts of ...

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