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 Kris Kosaka

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Kris Kosaka
Kris Kosaka, a resident of Japan since 1996, contributes regularly to The Japan Times. She is a lecturer at Meiji Gakuin University in the Faculty of International Studies.
For Kris Kosaka's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
Japan Times
COMMUNITY / Our Lives
Aug 4, 2012
Atomic bomb survivor credits desire to learn for living 'four lives'
Yuuki Yoshida, 80, divides his lifetime into four different "lives," but he has lived each of them by following one maxim: "Try to learn as if you were to live forever, and live as if you were to die tomorrow."
Japan Times
CULTURE / Stage
Aug 3, 2012
World Ballet Festival shows how Japan has jetéd its way onto the world stage
Ballet lovers faced a difficult choice this week when two productions of "Don Quixote" were performed in Tokyo. The shows heralded the opening of the 13th World Ballet Festival, whose main program began Thursday and closes with a Special Gala on Aug. 16.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Stage
Jul 19, 2012
China and Japan: A 40-year friendship worth singing about
Forget allegations of spies and economic intrigue. Put aside the controversial Senkaku Islands and celebrate as the National Centre for the Performing Arts in Beijing unites with the New National Theatre in Tokyo to commemorate the 40th anniversary of normalized relations between Japan and China. Two...
CULTURE / Books
Jul 15, 2012
Madame Butterfly's love child
Butterfly's Child, by Angela Davis-Gardner. Dial Press, 2011, 352 pp., $26.00 (hardcover) Western opera's opulent pageantry contradicts traditional Japanese understated aesthetics. In the novel "Butterfly's Child," Angela Davis-Gardner resolves this difference by crafting a subdued, multilayered...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY / Our Lives
Jun 30, 2012
British artist/chef finds happiness by keeping all of his options open
Cooking can be art and art nourishes, but what really connects the two for chef and artist Johnny Miller is the act of creation itself: "It's the physicality of it — both are directly related to your body and how your body moves. In cooking, you've got to touch things, touch hot and cold things....
Japan Times
COMMUNITY / Our Lives
Jun 23, 2012
Aussie rejects salaryman lifestyle to embrace love of nature in Hokkaido
Rambling among crates of raw fish, dawdling around with 450 types of freshly caught produce. It may seem an odd way to relax, but for James Gallagher, 46, the organized chaos of the Tsukiji Fish Market used to be a welcome respite during his lunch breaks at the advertising firm Dentsu in Tokyo.
CULTURE / Books
Jun 10, 2012
Essential reading for those who love haiku
Haiku Poetics in Twentieth Century Avant-garde Poetry, by Jeffrey Johnson. Lexington Books, Maryland, 2011, 226 pp., $70.00 (hardcover) The threads of haiku run through many layers of Japanese society — from school-age recitations and the Emperor's New Year's greetings to Twitter or text battles...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Jun 2, 2012
Japan's great outdoors becomes Oregonian's office-cum-playground
Gliding through powder across Mount Hakkoda in Aomori Prefecture or scanning the surfers at Shonan Beach in Kanagawa Prefecture, Gardner Robinson's life and work merge so completely that on the clock and on the slopes are one and the same.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Stage
May 24, 2012
Matthias von Stegmann creates a modern German myth for Japan
Modern and mythological perspectives converge as the New National Theatre Tokyo's Opera Division looks to its past to envision the future. From June 1-16, German-Japanese director Matthias von Stegmann guides this new vision of Richard Wagner's opera "Lohengrin," last produced at NNTT in 1997, when the...
CULTURE / Books
May 13, 2012
A chart-topper for J-Pop fans
Sayonara Amerika, Sayonara Nippon: A Geopolitical Prehistory of J-Pop by Michael K. Bourdaghs. Columbia University Press, New York, 2012, 304 pp., $27.50 (paperback)
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
May 12, 2012
Filmmaker savors being in situation where threat of the unknown looms
A surfboard mounted against a sea of sludge, whimsically defiant to the ruinous tide of debris. It's the kind of quirky beauty you might expect from Michael Arias, an American filmmaker based in Tokyo. Arias' creative work, in film through to his recent photographs of Tohoku, all paint with the same...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Apr 28, 2012
Mashiko-based U.S. potter vows he'll not be defeated by 3/11 destruction
Harvey Young, a ceramic artist for over 40 years who has spent nearly three decades in Mashiko, Tochigi Prefecture, knows a thing or two about shaping beauty out of chaos — and about the sudden misfires life can bring. Even his early love for pottery warped and melded with other interests until...
CULTURE / Books
Apr 15, 2012
Japanese law: a solid reference book
The Compendium of Basic Laws of Japan, by Ted Toku Morita. Kojinsha, Tokyo, 2011, 287 pp. (paperback) Add another reference book to your Japanese shelf; there's a wedge of space between the kanji dictionary and your battered "Japanese for Busy People." Ted Toku Morita's translation, "The Compendium of...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Apr 14, 2012
Canadian black-belt takes pride in action not words
For Robert Hughes, the shortest answer is doing. From his early determination to procure a traditional Japanese sword to his more recent work with Japanese students in the poverty-stricken streets of the Philippines, Hughes, 54, has spent over 30 years in Japan allowing his actions to speak eloquently...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Apr 7, 2012
Fighting the good fight for a healthy natural diet
Mamiko Matsuda, the best-selling author, translator and nutritional expert who divides her time between Japan and Houston, overcame an early struggle with poor health and disease to become an advocate for healthy diets and "natural hygiene."
Japan Times
CULTURE / Books
Apr 1, 2012
An email memoir on a life in Japan
Life and Nihonjin: Dispatches From Japan, by Alex Kahney. Portland Books, 2011, Japan, 290 pp., $16.00 (paperback) Japan's habit of technological innovation alongside tradition has surfaced in recent literary fads such as the "Densha no Otoko" (Train Man) phenomenon. What started as an urgent plea...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Mar 31, 2012
Singer finds fusion in Japan's cultural dichotomy
Japan's fusion of the traditional and modern fascinated musician Yara Eddine as a young child when she learned about the country at a school in Canada. Fifteen years later, Eddine witnessed this integration firsthand.
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Mar 17, 2012
Expat writer explores the fantastical
The first short story Thersa Matsuura ever wrote in Japan, "Sand Walls, Paper Doors," introduces the fantastical nonhuman characters of Japanese folklore, from the pillow-swapping trickster to the ghostly children who frolic through human dreams.
CULTURE / Books
Mar 4, 2012
Stories inspired by Japan's March 11 disasters
Tomo: Friendship Through Fiction (Anthology of Japan Teen Stories), edited by Holly Thompson. Stone Bridge Press, 2012, 384 pp. , $14.95. Holly Thompson, a Kanagawa-based novelist, worked alongside other volunteers in the months after the March 11, 2011, tragedy, shoveling tsunami sludge, clearing...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Feb 25, 2012
Multilingual ex-professor pours all his energy into translation, writing
Curled up in his German grandfather's library, the young Charles De Wolf looked up from the pages of Goethe to dream of the cobblestoned streets of Europe.

Longform

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