Tag - the-view-from-new-york

 
 

THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK

COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Apr 24, 2006
An unnaturally smooth naturalization?
NEW YORK -- I became an American citizen on March 31. The steps for citizenship were simple and easy, and the process took an unexpectedly short time. I experienced neither "the law's delay" nor "the insolence of office."
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Mar 27, 2006
Ishibashi's 'alternative reality' for Japan
NEW YORK -- A reader of my Jan. 30 column ("Another side to Japanese-Korean history") wrote to comment and, in the course of subsequent correspondence, wondered about an "alternative reality" or a "what if" in Japan's history before World War II. He had in mind, in particular, "Secretary (Cordell) Hull's...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Feb 27, 2006
Criticism of Japan skips the finer points
NEW YORK -- By way of criticizing Taro Aso as "Japan's Offensive Foreign Minister," a Feb. 13 New York Times editorial came up with a sweeping condemnation of the Japanese and their society by asserting that "public discourse in Japan and modern history lessons in its schools have never properly come...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Jan 30, 2006
Another side to Japanese-Korean history
NEW YORK -- Historian George Akita recently sent me a brief essay that appeared in the December issue of the monthly Nihon Rekishi (Japanese History). He had told me of a full-length article he'd written on alternative views of Japan's rule of Korea between 1910 and 1945. The essay, titled "New Currents...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Dec 26, 2005
A Japanese take on 'intelligent design'
NEW YORK -- Why do my compatriots, the Japanese, try to copy Americans -- often on the basis of a most tenuous understanding? The wonderment occurred when I checked the Internet to see if the notion of "intelligent design" (I.D.) was known in Japan and at once found that it was, and more.
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Nov 28, 2005
Ishihara fails to measure up to his image
NEW YORK -- Earlier this month Tokyo Gov. Shintaro Ishihara gave a speech in New York City, and I went to hear him. That's one thing you do in this city: go hear or see some of the more famous visitors from your home country.
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Oct 31, 2005
Is the American dream now a mirage?
NEW YORK -- Is the American dream just a mirage now? Earlier this year the Wall Street Journal ran a series called "Challenges to the American Dream," casting into doubt the "staple of America's self-portrait" that "a child born in poverty isn't trapped there." If that was putting the matter delicately,...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Sep 26, 2005
Constitutional debate welcome
NEW YORK -- I was recently intrigued by the constitutional debate -- not in Iraq, but in Japan -- when I read a book on the art of writing, "Bungei Tokuhon," that Yukio Mishima dictated in 1958.
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Aug 29, 2005
Worst abuse: being viewed as subhuman
NEW YORK -- World War II did not end neatly upon Japan's surrender on Aug. 15, 1945. Aside from scatterings of Japanese soldiers who joined local independence movements in Southeast Asia after the surrender, at least one sizable Japanese army unit fought on in China's northeastern province of Shanxi,...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Jul 25, 2005
Depredation of species that get in our way
NEW YORK -- "Protected Birds Are Back, With a Vengeance: Cormorants Take Over, Making Some Enemies." This headline in the New York Times earlier this month, inset in a photo showing a few black birds atop a tree, struck me with the thought: So it has come to pass. Hadn't the same daily some years back...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Jun 27, 2005
Shining a light on Turkish-Japanese ties
NEW YORK -- Selcuk Esenbel was in town. For many years now a professor of history at Bogazici University, Istanbul, Selcuk was, when I met her more than 30 years ago, studying Japanese history at Columbia University. The fruit of that study is her 1998 tome, which she gave me during her previous visit...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
May 30, 2005
China wasn't always so critical of Japan
NEW YORK -- Yet another round of Chinese and Korean protests against Japan for allegedly downplaying its past deeds in historical reconstruction came and went (or almost). This time, though, I was reminded of one thing I should have remembered from four decades ago: China used to turn a completely different...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Apr 25, 2005
Knight still mounted on a tethered horse
NEW YORK -- In 1958 there was a political upheaval in Iraq, which, as far as that country at that particular juncture in history was concerned, was the final rejection of Western rule. But Japan's reaction was shifty and muddled. Or so writer Yukio Mishima (1925-70) thought.
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Mar 28, 2005
A fundamentalism of sorts affected Japan
NEW YORK -- The influence of fundamentalist and evangelical religion on U.S. politics, both domestic and abroad, is growing, but something similar happened during the early part of the Showa Era (1926-89). I thought of this recently when I read Daikichi Terauchi's "Kejo no Showa Shi" (A History of Showa...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Feb 28, 2005
Tracking Mishima's footsteps in Florida
NEW YORK -- Earlier this month, when our friends Lenore and Robert invited us to visit them in Naples, Florida, where they recently acquired a new apartment, I decided to accept their offer. Naples is where Yukio Mishima (1925-70) spent a few days during his first visit to this country in January 1952,...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Feb 13, 2005
Iraq election exposed two faces of China
HONG KONG -- One unintended consequence of the Jan. 30 election in Iraq was that it exposed the hypocrisy and shortsightedness of China's policy toward Hong Kong and reunification with Taiwan. China not only expressed support for the rushed national election in its controlled press; it also donated $1...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Jan 31, 2005
Far-fetched redesigns between the lines
NEW YORK -- "Contrapuntal reading," as Edward Said called it, is the ability to read between the lines. The reader must be able to have what is referred to, but not described, play off the main descriptive concern. This ability is particularly important with novels written while empire-building was in...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Dec 27, 2004
Grass-root case for independent Taiwan
NEW YORK -- Sallie Huang is a passionate advocate of Taiwan's independence. She argues that China is simply flaunting its ignorance and wrongheadedness in claiming Taiwan as part of its territory.
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Nov 29, 2004
Remains of the Occupation mentality
NEW YORK -- Sometimes a perception formed during an era, however unthinking, never seems to leave you. When I read, in a detailed chronology of Yukio Mishima (1925-70), that Meredith Weatherby visited Mishima at a New York hotel for an all-day discussion about his translation of Mishima's "Confessions...
COMMENTARY / THE VIEW FROM NEW YORK
Oct 25, 2004
Manchuria as a whipping post
NEW YORK -- The New York Times has an intriguing take on Japan. The latest example is an article with the heading "Atrocity Amnesia: Japan Rewrites Its Manchuria Story" (Sept. 19).

Longform

Akiko Trush says her experience with the neurological disorder dystonia left her feeling like she wanted to chop her own hand off.
The neurological disorder that 'kills culture'