• Real Estate
  • JOBS 転職
  • STUDY IN JAPAN
  • Email Updates |
  • Home Delivery
weather icon

21

LGT.RAIN

TOKYO (4 a.m.)

  • Financial Markets
  • 97.85 ¥/$ (5 p.m.)

The Japan Times

THE FOREIGN ELEMENT

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Newsletter
  • RSS
  • Home Delivery
  • Email Updates
  • Today's Stories
  • MENU
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Life
  • Community
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • National
  • Asia Pacific
  • Business
  • World
  • Reference
  • Columns
  • Multimedia
Mutiny forces Berlusconi into defeat

Politics & Diplomacy

Mutiny forces Berlusconi into defeat

Silvio Berlusconi has failed in his attempt to topple the Italian government, leaving him weaker than ever and zapping the aura of invincibility that has surrounded him for two decades as he faces the possible loss of his Senate seat and a ban from ...

  • U.S., Japan to update defense rules in 2014
  • New spill at No. 1 laid to typhoon miscalculation
  • TPP countries to ban subsidies only when overfishing is feared
  • Madrid leader visits Abe; pair mark 400 years of bilateral ties
  • Smash-hit drama about banker draws interest from overseas markets
  • Editorials
  • Commentary
  • Reader Mail
  • Cartoons

William Pesek

A taxing challenge to revival

by William Pesek

As Shinzo Abe goes ahead with a sales-tax increase aimed at getting a handle on Japan's huge debt burden, he risks killing Japan's best chance for an economic recovery.

  • Outlook dims for a greater Osaka
  • Law school and bar exam reform
  • Consumption tax raise misdirected
  • Tale of two crises: connecting the dots from Iran to Syria
  • Is the GOP's Rand Paul America's leading liberal?
  • Travel
  • Digital
  • Food & Drink
  • Environment
  • Style & Design
  • Language
  • Lifestyle
  • People
  • Columns
  • Multimedia
Chef brings kitchen flair from Lyon to Hatsudai

Food & Drink | TOKYO FOOD FILE

Chef brings kitchen flair from Lyon to Hatsudai

by Robbie Swinnerton

Hatsudai has a lot going for it. This quiet low-rise residential neighborhood just minutes west of Shinjuku boasts a friendly traditional shōtengai (shopping street) and a lively annual Awa Odori dance festival. Now add to that a really outstanding restaurant. Anis opened in early ...

  • A modern twist to traditional snacks
  • Sonoma flavors come to Four Seasons; Lawry's beef on the bone; Hungarian fair at Royal Park Hotel
  • A welcome sign: Tantrums may be on the way out
  • Construction work at the desk
  • A recipe for sanity: water, salt and nothing else
  • Voices
  • Issues
  • Our Lives
  • Events
  • Event Listings
  • How-tos
  • Columns
Triumph of Tokyo Olympic bid sends wrong signal to Japan's resurgent right

Issues | JUST BE CAUSE

Triumph of Tokyo Olympic bid sends wrong signal to Japan's resurgent right

by Debito Arudou

International events undermine Japan's democracy. Shame on the International Olympic Committee for being a party to it.

  • Cultural and legal hurdles block path to child adoptions in Japan
  • The build-up to get that housing loan
  • Beninese ambassador brings TV star power to diplomacy
  • Tokyo: How do you feel about the capital hosting the 2020 Olympics?
  • Foreign iPhone fans, be aware of Softbank's two-year visa rule
  • Film
  • Music
  • Art
  • Stage
  • Events
  • Festivals
  • Books
  • TV
  • Columns
  • Multimedia
Ebizo rethinks kabuki's strategy

Stage

Ebizo rethinks kabuki's strategy

by Tomoko Otake

In the glitzy and gossipy world of Japanese celebrity, hardly a week goes by without revelations being made about — or made by — Ichikawa Ebizo XI. For years, the charismatic young star of the kabuki world has never long been out of the ...

  • Double the trouble, twice the joy for Japan's hāfu
  • 'R100'
  • Talent show emphasizes culture
  • 'Hafu'
  • 'Red Dawn'
  • Baseball
  • Soccer
  • Basketball
  • Sumo
  • Figure Skating
  • More Sports
  • Columns
  • Multimedia
Nishikori, Raonic move into Rakuten Open quarterfinals

Tennis

Nishikori, Raonic move into Rakuten Open quarterfinals

Reigning champion Kei Nishikori made quick work of Feliciano Lopez, walloping the Spaniard in a straight-sets victory Thursday to reach the quarterfinals of the Rakuten Japan Open. The world No. 13 Nishikori needed little over an hour to put away Lopez, 7-6 (7-4), 6-0 ...

  • Reysol eliminated in Asian Champions League
  • Carp lock up third-place spot for playoffs
  • Detroit slips past Buffalo
  • Shakhtar held by Man United at home
  • Cobb, Rays shut down Indians to make ALDS
  • Voices
  • Issues
  • Our Lives
  • Events
  • Event Listings
  • How-tos
  • Columns
  • News
    • National
    • World
    • Business
    • Asia Pacific
    • Reference
    • Columns
    • Multimedia
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Commentary
    • Reader Mail
    • Cartoons
  • Life
    • Travel
    • Digital
    • Food & Drink
    • Environment
    • Style & Design
    • Language
    • Lifestyle
    • People
    • Columns
    • Multimedia
  • Community
    • Voices
    • Issues
    • Our Lives
    • Events
    • Event Listings
    • How-tos
    • Columns
  • Culture
    • Film
    • Music
    • Art
    • Stage
    • Events
    • Festivals
    • Books
    • TV
    • Columns
    • Multimedia
  • Sports
    • Baseball
    • Soccer
    • Basketball
    • Sumo
    • Figure Skating
    • More Sports
    • Columns
    • Multimedia
As Japan reeled from disaster, three men went cycling

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT May 28, 2013

As Japan reeled from disaster, three men went cycling

by Simon Scott

In 1977, British author and long-term Tokyo resident Alan Booth made a journey on foot from the northernmost point in Japan, Cape Soya, to Kyushu’s southernmost tip, Cape Sata. Booth’s account of that epic trek, “The Roads to Sata,” became one of the classic ...

Want more out of Japan but face doesn't fit? Be TOFITR

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT May 28, 2013

Want more out of Japan but face doesn't fit? Be TOFITR

by Glenn Newman

I recently served as a “private sector representative” in a panel discussion before an audience of foreign graduate students at the University of Tokyo. Many of the students will soon be seeking employment in Japan; because I have spent 25 years living in or ...

Fear and incarceration, from Kampala to Nagoya

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT May 21, 2013

Fear and incarceration, from Kampala to Nagoya

by Stephen Carr

“I was stopped by two men in a government-registered vehicle, blindfolded and dragged off the street. They took me away to a house in a place I did not know. I was forced into a room with blood all over the walls and floor, ...

  • The Japan Times ST
  • JT WEEKLY

What's Trending Now

Ambivalent Japan turns on its 'insular' youth

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT May 21, 2013

Ambivalent Japan turns on its 'insular' youth

by Chris Burgess

Japan's decision to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership free-trade negotiations shows that at least some in government have accepted the fact that "opening up" Japan is in the nation's best long-term interests.

Turks in Kansai fear Inose gaffe indicative of wider ignorance about culture

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT May 14, 2013

Turks in Kansai fear Inose gaffe indicative of wider ignorance about culture

by Eric Johnston

"Stupid", "shockingly provincial" and "a sign of how little Japanese people really understand that part of the world" were among the reactions of Turkish residents in Kansai to Tokyo Gov. Naoki Inose's comments about Turkey and the wider Muslim world.

Inose's slurs anger, bemuse Turks in Tokyo but may boost Istanbul's Olympic bid

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT May 14, 2013

Inose's slurs anger, bemuse Turks in Tokyo but may boost Istanbul's Olympic bid

by David Mcneill

It's prayer time at Tokyo's biggest mosque and the congregation is pondering God, community and Naoki Inose, the city's governor, who many here say has revealed himself to be, well, a bit of a bigot.

Samurai moms and the art of brood maintenance: a mother from the West's lessons from the East

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT Apr 30, 2013

Samurai moms and the art of brood maintenance: a mother from the West's lessons from the East

by Kris Kosaka

May in Japan is the perfect month for mothers. Wreathed in the fertile blooms of spring, bolstered by days of absolute perfection, May is also a month of muddy contradiction.

Student seeking Kyoto flat told: No foreigners allowed

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT Apr 23, 2013

Student seeking Kyoto flat told: No foreigners allowed

by Simon Scott

After spending 2½ years living the quiet life in Shiga Prefecture, Ryukoku University student Victor Rosenhoj was looking forward to moving to Kyoto, where things promised to be more lively and international.

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT Apr 23, 2013

Renter guarantor system a headache for foreigners

by Charles Lewis

Things were going well for Patrick after a year in Japan. He had found a job he liked, met a girl he planned to marry and was ready to move out of the small room his older brother, a longtime resident, was letting him ...

Mad court rush could brake or bless Abe's vision

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT Apr 16, 2013

Mad court rush could brake or bless Abe's vision

by Colin P.A. Jones

As Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his Cabinet rush to diminish the Bank of Japan’s bothersome independence, join the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations (sort of . . .), start pouring lovely, popular concrete before the summer House of Councilors elections and (sotto voce) maybe even ...

Whatever happened to the Goldman Sachs union?

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT Apr 9, 2013

Whatever happened to the Goldman Sachs union?

by Patrick Budmar

In February 2012, a small band of sacked workers in Japan took on one of the world’s biggest investment banks, Goldman Sachs, unionizing in a bid to keep their jobs and win a better deal from a firm they believed had treated them unfairly. ...

A tale of two knives, a Kiwi legend, a gang and a girl

Issues | THE FOREIGN ELEMENT Apr 2, 2013

A tale of two knives, a Kiwi legend, a gang and a girl

by Simon Scott

The story reads like a New Zealand news editor’s wish list: Celebrity, dangerous weapons, bizarre behavior, death threats, Brazilian street gangs and a mysterious love interest.

1234

Blogs

  • Japan Pulse
  • Yen for Living
BACK TO TOP
JT Weekly The Japan Times ST Jobs Study in Japan JT for Women JT Bookclub Japanese School Directory
  • Email Updates |
  • Home Delivery
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Newsletter
  • News
    • National
    • World
    • Business
    • Asia Pacific
    • Reference
    • Columns
    • Multimedia
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Commentary
    • Reader Mail
    • Cartoons
  • Life
    • Travel
    • Digital
    • Food & Drink
    • Environment
    • Style & Design
    • Language
    • Lifestyle
    • People
    • Columns
    • Multimedia
  • Community
    • Voices
    • Issues
    • Our Lives
    • Events
    • Event Listings
    • How-tos
    • Columns
  • Culture
    • Film
    • Music
    • Art
    • Stage
    • Events
    • Festivals
    • Books
    • TV
    • Columns
    • Multimedia
  • Sports
    • Baseball
    • Soccer
    • Basketball
    • Sumo
    • Figure Skating
    • More Sports
    • Columns
    • Multimedia
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Work for us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Link Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Advertise
  • Site Feedback
  • FAQ
  • Support
  • Press

The Japan Times LTD. All rights reserved.

The Japan Times