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Payal Kapadia
Japan Times
LIFE / Language
Apr 19, 2002
Drawing on their experiences
Orange flames shoot out from two black-and-white skyscrapers. Airplanes outlined in black head for the buildings from opposing directions. The street below is filled with red cars, sirens on top. Stick figures fall from windows high up; others on the ground wave their arms desperately. A text balloon...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art
Apr 10, 2002
Tracing the Eastward footsteps of Indian gods
Toshio Yamanouchi's job took him to India in 1951 -- but it wasn't simply work that kept him there for the next 25 years. What kept him based in New Delhi and took him traveling all across the subcontinent and Southeast Asia was a single-minded search: for the artistic trail blazed by religion on the...
LIFE / Language
Apr 5, 2002
When the lights go out, who'll be waiting?
Modern monsters seem to have a big image problem. If you've seen the new movie "Monsters, Inc.," you know they're in trouble because, well -- they just aren't frightening!
LIFE / Language
Mar 22, 2002
A brief history of the comic strip
Herge was not the first to create comic art. There were many artists who came before him. They all played a part in the evolution of the comic strip as we know it today. But, where did it all really begin?
LIFE / Language
Mar 22, 2002
The boy who's been everywhere
Over the last 73 years, this boy's been everywhere. He's zoomed to the moon in a red-and-white checkered rocket, trekked snow-covered Tibet in search of the yeti and has been saved at the last minute from being sacrificed to the Sun God by angry Aztecs. For all his hair-raising adventures, he hasn't...
LIFE / Language / FOR KIDS
Mar 15, 2002
Join the global St. Patrick's Day party
How would you like to spend Sunday afternoon dancing jigs to Irish pipes? Or marching with a group of baton-twirling cheerleaders? Or making friends with leprechauns?
LIFE / Language / FOR KIDS
Mar 1, 2002
The boy who dreamt of dragons
More than a century ago, there was a 7-year-old boy who dreamt of a "green great dragon" and wrote his first short story about it.
LIFE / Language / FOR KIDS
Feb 22, 2002
Don't let big economic words daunt you
It's never too early to get your facts straight about the economy. Many people, even the leaders of powerful countries, still get them mixed up. Using the wrong terms, like U.S. President George W. Bush did this week, can create a lot of confusion for everyone.

Longform

Sociologist Gracia Liu-Farrer argues that even though immigration doesn't figure into Japan's autobiography, it is more of a self-perception than a reality.
In search of the ‘Japanese dream’