Bringing Iwao home
Kirsten Han
Hakamata Iwao is believed to have been the world’s longest-serving death row prisoner. For more than half a century, his sister Hideko has never given up on him.
Hakamata Iwao is believed to have been the world’s longest-serving death row prisoner. For more than half a century, his sister Hideko has never given up on him.
As discussions of a so-called nuclear power renaissance resurface, Return to Fukushima pushes us to (re)consider not only the ways we live but also the exploitative systems through which energy is produced and consumed.
Beyond healing himself, Haruki Murakami, through his stories, has grown more interested in helping others heal.
A poem from Jake Dennis
Twenty-five years after the death of the great Japanese actor Toshiro Mifune, a re-appraisal of a film that has been unjustly neglected.
Turning photography into art in Japan
Jun’ichiro Tanizaki’s stories in English, for the first time
A documentary remembers the firebombing of Tokyo
Poetry from Trish Shishikura
A new translation of Japan’s seminal poetry collection
Three dining tales from Tokyo
On Japanese pop legend Ōtaki Eiichi
A mission to understand the Heart Sutra
Japan’s otaku culture was crafted from times of hardship
Nearly a decade after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, Japan is struggling with the clean up
In Tokyo, it’s never clear whether you are in a lockdown or not
Books, age and beauty in west Tokyo
Before Carlos Ghosn there was Ichiro Shioji
Death and life in a Tokyo neighbourhood
Japan’s kintsuba sweetshops blend informal spontaneity with old-world elegance
Gokanosho is not just a place; it’s also a state of mind
Finding a daytime high in a perfect bowl of hot noodles
Rare glimpses into Japan’s invasion and occupation of Singapore
Ian Buruma comes of age in Japan’s warm, wet days of low-tech chaos
How young and ambitious Vietnamese find themselves working in Tokyo’s convenience stores.
The multigenerational family saga comes of age in Asia