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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
ACTORS AND ACTRESSES
The Vindication of Kusama Yayoi. Jan-Feb. ‘98 p.36
Japan’s First Modern Actress. May-Jun. ‘91 p.17
ADVENTURE AND ADVENTURES
Mr. Uemura's Last Adventure pt. II. May '84, p.9
Mr. Uemura’s Last Adventure pt. I. Apr. ‘84 p.9
ADVERTISING
Think Pure Thoughts. Jul. ‘96 p.54
The Age of Kei (New advertising techniques). Jan.
'96 p.25.
AGRICULTURE
"The Reason I Don't Quit Farming." Jan.'95, p.7
Nature farming. Nov-Dec '92, p.37.
The Lucidophyllous Forest Culture Zone. Jan-Feb
'91, p.14.
AGRICULTURE - ECONOMIC ASPECTS
Japan's Agricultural Cooperative Mainly Raises Prices.
May'84, p.26
AICHI
Aichi: Man-Made Environment on a Cultural Cross-Road.
Mar.'80, p.44
AINU
Hokkaido: Land of the Ainu, Final Battleground for Tokugawa
Retainers, Dec.'84, p.29
AKUTAGAWA, RYUNOSUKE
“The Window”. Jan.-Feb. ‘98 p.44
AMUSEMENT PARKS
Blue Fall (in Yokohama). Sept.-Oct. ‘98 p.15
ANIMAL ABUSE
Ethel Fairmont Snyder, Mary Elkinton Nitobe and the Founding
of the Japan Humane Society. Jan. 97 p.13
ARCHEOLOGY
The Jomon Period Revisited. Mar. '96 p.45
Haniwa. May '96 p.32
ARCHEOLOGY (con;t.)
Obstinate Grave Keepers. Sep.'86 p. 60
Large Number of Bronze Swords Unearthed in the Land of
Mythology Nov.'85, p.50.
Epitaph on Monument to Korean King Verified, Dec.'84,
p.21
Newly Unearthed Royal Tomb Unveils Historical Mystery.
Jul.'84, p.37
Third "Time Capsule" Found in Horyu-ji Temple. Oct.'83,
p.19
Four-Thousand-Year-Old Mask. Aug.'83, p.51
And the Japan Sea, Jul.'83, p.51
Why were Giant Tumule Constructed pt. I, Jul.'82, p.64
Why were Giant Tumule Constructed pt.II, Sep.'82, p.66
Echigo: Country of the Flaming Pottery. Mar.'82,
p.54
Fossils of a Prehistoric Animal Dating From 15 Million
Years Ago Discovered. Nov.'82, p.12
Was the First Square and Round Tumulus Built on Shikoku?
Nov.'82, p.12
An Ancient Noble's "Silver Belt" Excavated. May'82, p.52
A Haniwa in the Shape of a House with a Bed Inside has
Been Discovered. Nov.'81, p.20
Relics of the Mongolian Invasions 700 Years Ago are Being
Recovered in Succession. Sep.'81, p.11
ARCHITECTURE
Japanese Housing Over the Centuries. Sep.-Oct.’98
p.30
Kawara: Rooftops of Japanese Towns. May '96
p.35
Premodern Japanese Bridges. Mar/Apr '94, p.28
Japanese Architecture - A Lost Tradition? Sep-Oct
'92, p.10.
Traditional Japanese Houses and the Japanese View of
Life. Mar-Apr '91, p.55.
The Search for "Japanese Architecture" in the Modern
Age. Mar/Apr '89 p. 52.
Carpenters' Tools and Japanese Architecture. May'88,
p. 59.
The Aesthetics of Korin's Mansion. May'86, p.40
Shoji, Yuka. Mar.'85, p.10
The Construction of Edo Castle. Oct. '83, p.66
Tokonoma - The Symbol of a Japanese-Style House. Jan.'80,
p.16
ARMS AND ARMOR
The Path to Mythology. Mar/Apr.'90
The Katana. Nov/Dec '89, p.14.
The "Katana" enchanting Beauty and a Razor-Sharp Edge.
Jul.'83, p.6
ART
The Art of Shomu’s Era. Sept.-Oct.’98 p.58
The Art of Tenmu’s Era. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.50
ART (con’t.)
Shibai-e: Portraying the Beauty of Kabuki. Nov/Dec'94,
p.32
Writing Box With a Design of a Woodcutter, Jun.'84, p.33
Cherry Blossom Viewing & Hawking - Masterpiece of
Momoyama Period. Apr.'84, p.32
Decorative Screens. Mar.'84, p.32
Monochromatic: Aesthetics - Sumie and Zen. May'83, p.68
The Beauty and Sensibility of Japan. May'82, p.40
Palace of Beauty and Modern Technology. Mar.'82,
p.44
"The Great Japan Exhibition-Art of the Edo Period"
to be Held in London. Sep. '81, p.26
Ogawa Usen: A Painter of Enchanted Lands. Jan-Feb.'94,
p.30.
Sotatsu and Korin: Two Flowers of Japanese Painting.
Sep-Oct '92, p.31.
Lady Under a Tree. Nov-Dec '91, p.33.
Ukiyo-e Painter Katsushika Hokusai. Jul-Aug '91,
p.32.
Frank Llloyd Wright and the Arts of Japan. Jan/Feb'90,
p.46.
The Yamanaka Scroll. Jul/Aug '90, p.32.
Fragment of the Illustrated Sutra of Past Causes and
Present Effects. Jan/Feb '89, p.36.
Ukiyo-e by Katsukawa Shunsho. Nov/Dec '88, p.36.
Raku-chu Raku-gai Zu. May '87 p.35
Samurai Mettle Reflected in Sumie. Jul.'85 p. 40
Genre Painting of Women During a Period of Peace.
Apr. '85 p. 40.
The Lovely Zen Art of Hakuin. Mar.'85, p.59.
"The Great Japan Exhibition-Art of the Edo Period" to
be Held in London. Sep.'81, p.26
ARTISTS
A Cool Gal Named Hal. May-Jun.’98 p.6
The Vindication of Kusama Yayoi. Jan.-Feb.’98 p.36
The Art of Imai, Erika. Jul.’97 p.25
The Happy Life of Shimazaki, Mikio. May '97, p.29
A Fellow of Infinite Jest: Charles Wirgman and His Times.
Mar/Apr'95, p.28
Seeking the Spirit of the Classics: Kobayashi Kokei.
Sept.-Oct.’94 p.31
Pioneering Artist, Fascist Propogandist: Yokoyama Taikan
and His Turbulent Times. Jul/Aug'94, p.30
The Riddle of Sharaku: The Case of the Vanishing Ukiyo-e
Artist. May/June'94, p.31
Ogawa Usen: A Painter of Enchanted Lands. Jan-Feb'94,
p.30.
Kitaoji Rosanjin. Jul-Aug '93, p.40.
Ito Jokuchu, A Unique Painter of Realistic Pictures.
Mar-Apr '91, p.31.
Ukiyo-e Painter Katsushika Hokusai. Jul-Aug '91,
p.32.
ARTISTS (con’t.)
Uemura Shoen: A Woman Artist Devoted to Painting Beauties.
Jan-Feb '91, p.28.
Katsuhira Tokushi. Jan.'87, p.39.
ARTS AND CRAFTS
The Takumi Go to Paris. Nov.-Dec.’98 p.26
Choshichi Tataki. Nov.-Dec.’98 p.33
The Kanazawa Institute of Traditional Crafts. Nov.-Dec.’98
p.36
The Katana. Nov/Dec'89 p. 14.
Mounting: The Charm of Hanging Scrolls. May'86,
p.54.
ASIAN LITERATURE
Higuchi Ichiyo: A Woman Who Countered Prejudice With
Pride. Jan-Feb '92, p.11.
ATSUMI, KIYOSHI
Tora-san. Sept. '96 p.4
AUTHORS
In Search of Kafu’s Tokyo. Sept.-Oct.’98 p.36
“Low Clogs” (short story). Sept.-Oct.’98 p.43
The Peaks and Valleys of a Life and Mind: Miyazawa
Kenji...
Jul. '96 p.13
"The Bears of Mt. Nametoko". Jul. '96 p.25
Tripping to Iihatobu: Miyazawa Kenji's Iwate.
Jul. '96 p.29
Natsume Soseki for the 90's: The Nation Looks to a Meiji
Writer for Guidance. Nov/Dec'94, p.38
Higuchi Ichiyo: A Woman Who Countered Prejudice with
Pride. Jan-Feb '92, p.11.
The Novelist in Today's World. May/June'90, p.54.
AZUMINO
Azumino. Nov.'97, p.47
BAMBOO
Cover Detail. Nov-Dec '92, p.3.
Romancing the Bamboo. Mar-Apr '92, p.25.
BASEBALL
Nomo Hideo: Beau Ideal of the Individualist Japanese.
Nov/Dec'95, p.47
The Soil of Koshien Stadium. Mar/Apr'90, p.38.
Sorrowful Ace Without a Motherland. May/Jun '89,
p.7.
Questions of a Sojourner in Japan. Sep/Oct'88,
p.19.
BEER see: BEVERAGES
BEGONIA
The Begonia. Sep-Oct '93, p.28.
BELLS
Dotaku: The Sacred Bells of Ancient Times.
Jul.'97, p.34
BEHAVIOR
More Souvenirs! Mar.'82, p.18
BEVERAGES
A Dispatch From the Frontline of Japan’s Beer War.
Sept.-Oct.’98 p.11
It’s Gotta Be Ginjo (sake). Jul.-Aug.’98 p.27
Beer and the Dawn of Westernization. Sep/Oct'89,
p.58.
Asahi Super Dry Revolutionizes the Japanese Beer Industry.
Sep/Oct'89, p.61.
Enjoy Sake. Jan/Feb.'89, p.8.
The Chuhai Boom. Nov.'84, p.16
BIRDS
The Pheasant and the Crane, Birds of Luck. Jan.'87,
p.34.
BLACK, HENRY J.
Kairakutei Black. Nov. '96 p.41
"A Tobacco Lover". Nov. '96 p.47
BLOOD GROUPS
Questions of a Sojourner in Japan. Jan/Feb '89,
p.50.
BOKUSEKI see: CALLIGRAPHY
BONEN-KAI
Bonen-kai and Entropies. Sep/Oct'88, p.48.
BONITO
Dried Bonito: Whetting Appetites for Centuries.
May-Jun '92, p.24.
BONSAI
The Humor and Virtues of Muromachi Bonsai. May'86,
p.30.
BOOKS - REVIEWS
On the Road with Friar Manrique: The Land of the Great
Image. Jul/Aug'95, p.28
Lectures by Japan's Nobel Laureate in Literature: Japan,
the Ambiguous and Myself. Jul/Aug'95, p.28
Zen and Japanese Culture. May/June '95, p.40
BOOKS - REVIEWS (con’t.)
The Zen Monastic Experience: Buddhist Practice in
Contemporary Korea. May/June'95, p.40
The Rimbaud of Japan: the Poems of Nakahara Chuya.
Mar/Apr'95, p.19
Inventing Confucius - Confucius: A Novel. Mar/Apr'95,
p.18
Tetsuko's Mother Chotchan. Jan/Feb'95, p.52
Breaching the Conspiracy of Politeness - Japanese Slang
Uncensored. Jan/Feb'95, p.50
A Middle Ground in the Abortion Debate. Nov/Dec'94, p.13
Factory Girls: Women in the Thread Mills of Meiji Japan.
May/June'94, p.38
A Young Man's Psychology Seen Through a Housewife's Eyes.
Dec.'84, p.54
Wisdom From Life in the Guamanian Jungle. May'84,
p.18
The Signature and the Seal. Jan.'83, p.64
The Japanese and the Gazes of Others. Jul.'82,
p.6
Color Preference as a Reflection of One's Heart.
Jul.'82,p.6
BOSATSU
The Amida Nyorai of Byodo - in Temple. Jul-Aug
'92, p.11.
The Eleven-Headed Kannon of Dogan-ji Temple.
Sep-Oct '91, p.10.
Nyorai and Bonsai. Jan'88, p.21.
BOTANY
Makino Tomitaro: The Green Thumb of Japanese Botanists.
Sep-Oct '93, p.39.
BRONZE see: METALWORK
BUDDHISM see also: Folklore
Rennyo: A Holy Man with a Worldly Mind. Nov.-Dec.’98
p.42
Honen Dogen: Asserting Zazen was Buddhism Itself.
May ‘97 p.51
Shinran: Buddhist Medium and Heir to Honen.
Mar.’97 p.25
Honen. Preaching Nenbutsu and Offering Salvation
for the Masses. Jan.'97, p.47
Shotoku Taishi: Japan's Buddhist Role Model and
Midwife of
Wa. Sept. '96 p.51
Kukai and Saicho: Too Esoteric for Our Times.
Nov. '96 p.50
Gyoki: A High Priest for the People. May-Jun.’93
p.40
Dosojin: The Peaceful Roadside Deity. Mar-Apr '93,
p.28.
The Kumano Magaibutsu. Jan-Feb '93, p.30.
The Amida Nyorai of Byodo-in Temple. Jul-Aug '92,
p.11.
The Eleven-Headed Kannon of Dogan-ji Temple.
May-Jun '92, p.17.
BUDDHISM (con’t.)
A Treasure Among Treasures - the Fuku-Kensaku - Kannon
of the Hokke-do. Mar-Apr '92, p.30.
The Disembodied Yakushi Nyorai of Kofukuji Temple.
Nov-Dec '91, p.18.
The Miroku Bosatsu of Koryu-ji and Shotoku Taishi.
Sep-Oct '91, p.10.
The Priest Myoe, A Man Who Lived in This World and the
Unconscious World. Sep/Oct'90, p.48
The Two Flowers of Japanese Zen. Jul/Aug'90, p.46.
The Echiyen Daibutsu. Jan/Feb '89, p.25.
The Echiyen Daibutsu. Nov/Dec '88, p.28.
Ten Indian Dieties Introduced into Buddhism. Aug.'88,
p.46.
Esoteric Buddhism & Ferocious Dieties. May'88,
p.25.
Nyorai and Buddhism. Jan.'88, p.21.
Shinto and Buddhism in Japanese Culture. Nov.'87,
p.28.
The Birth of Buddhist Images. Nov.'87, p.28.
The World of Engi in Buddhism. Sep.'86, p.14.
The "Living Buddahs" of Japan. Oct.'84, p.21
Ninth-Century Statue of Kannon. Aug.'84, p.33
The Twelve Linked Chain of Dependent Origination.
May'84,p.54
Saicho & the birth of Japanese Buddhism pt.I. Aug.-Sep.'83
p.9
The Introduction of Buddhism Into Japan. Nov.'82, p.66
BULLYING
Exorcising the Bully. Jul. '96 p.49
BUSHIDO
"Menoto - Fountainheads of fealty". Feb.-Mar.'84, p.12
Fathers and Sons Related by "Eboshi"
The Joei Code, The First Written Code for Warriors. Jan.'84,
p.14
Seppuku Testimony to the Samurai Spirit. Dec.'83, p.10
Enter Yasutoki. Oct/Nov '83, p.60
The Jokyu Revolt. Aug.'83, p.54
Toward the Jokyu Revolt. Jul.'83, p.54
The Death of Yoritomo. May'83, p.53
Yoritomo Goes to Kyoto. Jan.'83, p.13
Yoritomo's Victory. Sep.'82, p.13
The Battle of Dan-no-ura. May'82, p.12
The Cloistered Emperor and Yoritomo. Jan'82, p.54
The Battle of Yashima. Mar.'82, p.10
The Battle of Ichi-no-tani. Nov.'81, p.11
Yoshinaka is Killed at Lakeshore. Sep.'81, p.63
Yoshinaka Captures Kyoto. Jul.'81, p.60
Yoritomo Marches into Kamakura. May'81, p.62
Yoritomo Mobilizes an Army. Mar.'81, p.53
BUSHIDO (con’t.)
Victory for the Taira Clan. Nov.'80, p.58
The Heiji Insurrection. Jul.'80, p.46
Death for the Vanquished, Bitterness for the Victors.
May'80, p.45
Self Introductions for Honor. Mar.'80, p.21
The Eve of the Hogen Insurrection. Jan.'80 p. 38
BUSINESS
Deregulation in Japan. May'97, p.46
BUSINESS AND LABOR
The "Just in Time" Principle in Japanese Management.
Dec.84, p.6
The Productivity of White-Collar Workers in Japan. Sep.84,
p.6
Ownership of Japanese Companies. Apr.-May'84, p.6
Total Quality Control. Feb-Mar.'84, p.6.
Corporate Responses to the Industrial Shift in Postwar
Japan Oct-Nov.83, p.12.
High Technology Management in Japan pt. I. Aug-Sep'83,
p.6
The International Comparison of Labor Productivity. Sep'82,
p.11
Japanese Intracompany Employee Welfare System. May'81,
p.51
The Increase in Japanese Labor Productivity. Jan.'82,
p.64
Japanese Enterprise Labor Unions. May'81, p.12
CAMBODIA
Choshichi Tataki (Restoration works in Angkor Thom,
Cambodia). Nov.-Dec.’98 p.33
CAMELLIA
The Camellia Blossoms of Profound Beauty. Jan/Feb'95,
p.28
The Camellia. Mar/Apr.'90, p.32.
CARP STREAMERS
Carp Streamers (Boys' Day). Mar. '96 p.32
CASTLES
Himeji Castle. Jul/Aug'90, p.38.
CHARACTER
Edoites Character Traits. Nov.'85, p.21.
CHARMS
Lucky Charms. Nov-Dec '93, p.25.
CHICHIBU MOUNTAINS
The Mountain "Islands" of Chichibu. May-Jun'89, p.30.
CHIKUMA RIVER
Chikuma River Sketchbooks. Nov.'97, p.27
CHILD REARING
The Tenement Way of Life: Reflections on the Value
of the Person to Person Connection. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.7
CHILDREN - JAPAN
The Tenement Way of Life: Reflections on the Value
of the Person to Person Connection. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.7
CHILDREN'S CASTLE
Castle of the Computer Kids. Mar.'86, p.40.
CHINA - HISTORY
Tragedy of Settlers in Manchuko. Jul/Aug'89, p.46.
Dr. Morrison's War. Mar/Apr.'89, p.5.
CHOSOKABE MOTOCHIKA
The Tragedy of Chosokabe Motochika. Sep/Oct'90,
p.16.
CHOYA SHIROJIRO
The Red-Seal Ship of Merchant-Soldier Choya Shirojiro.
Nov/Dec'90, p.30.
CHOPSTICKS
How to Use Chopsticks.Jan/Feb'89, p.52.
CHRISTIANITY
Stones in the Meadow: The Reasons Why Christianity
has not Flowered in Japan. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.36
The History of Japan's Early Christians pt.3. Nov/Dec.'90,
p.16.
The History of Japan's Early Christians pt.2. Sep/Oct.'90,
p.7.
The History of Japan's Early Christians pt.1. Jul/Aug.'90,
p.7.
CHRISTMAS
Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Business? Sept.-Oct.’98
p.6
CHRYSANTHEMUM
The Chrysanthemum Elegant Flower Symbolizing Long Life.
Jan-Feb '93, p.36.
CIGARETTE HABIT see: TOBACCO HABIT
CITY PLANNING
A Word From the Publisher. Jul.'87, p.4.
CLIMATE
The Bai-U: Rain of Plums and Mould. Sep-Oct '92,
p.39.
CLOTHING AND DRESS
Hanten: Conveying the Chicness of Edo. Jan-Feb
'94, p.26.
Hakama - A Symbol of Samurai's Might and Women's Rights.
Mar-Apr '92, p.36.
Grogeous Kimonos for Festive Occasions. May-Jun
'91, p.28.
The Charm of Kimono Patterns. Mar-Apr '91, p.44.
Spinning Thread Out of Forest. Jan-Feb '91, p.22.
The Chic of Women's Fireproof Clothes. Mar/Apr'90,
p.35.
Shoes and the Japanese. Mar/Apr'90, p.48.
Straight Lines of the Kimono, Curves of Western Clothes.
May/Jun'89, p.37.
The Peculiar Dress Codes of Japanese Schools. Nov/Dec.'88,
P.48.
COFFEE HOUSES see also: RESTAURANTS, BARS,
ETC.
Tokyo Kissaten. Jan. '96 p.6
COINS
Money. May/Jun'90, p.44.
COLOR
Indigo and Safflower, Two Colors of Japan, pt.2.
Nov/Dec'90, p.27.
Indigo and Safflower, Two Colors of Japan, pt.1.
Sep/Oct'90, p.30.
COMMERCE
The Sogo Shosha at a Crossroad. Nov.'84, p.6
COMPUTERS
Developing a Computer that Grows Wiser as it Learns.
Jan. '96 p.41
The Japanese Word Processor. Mar. '96 p.25
CONCERTS
A Different Sort of Pilgrimage. Sept.'97, p.34
CONFUCIANISM
Terako-ya: Inculcating Confucianism, Teaching the Three
Rs. Jul-Aug '91, p.15
COOKERY see also: FOOD
Monsieur Shimamura: The Japanese Man Nearest the
Summit of
French cuisine. May '96 p.30
COOKING see: COOKERY
FOOD
COSTUME see: CLOTHING AND DRESS
COUNTRY LIFE
Indigo Memories (writing haiku about the natural environment
of a Yamanashi village). Mar. '96 p.17
CRAFTS see: ARTS AND CRAFTS
CRAFTS, TRADITIONAL
Origami Beauty Born of Paper. Jul/Aug'95, p.6
CRANES
Cover Detail. Jul-Aug '93, p.3.
CRESTS see: HERALDRY
CRIME
The Natural Deaths of a Death-Row Inmate. Jul'87,
p.24.
The Crimes of Japanese Student Overseas. Sep.'81, p.12
The Origin of the Yakuza. Sep.'81, p.45
CULTURE
The Tree of the Universe and the Spring of Life. Nov/Dec'95,
p.18
The Ogasawara School of Etiquette for the Shogun or the
Man on the Street. Sep/Oct'95, p.50
Marriage - Japanese Style. Nov/Dec'95, p.6
Yose: Japan's Intimate Variety Halls. Mar/Apr'95, p.36
Origami, Beauty Born of Paper. Jul/Aug'95, p.6
Samurai Swimming Nihon-eiho. May/June'94, p.40
Maiko: Flowers of the Gay Quarters. Nov/Dec'94, p.7
Shogi: A Game of War with no Casualties. Mar/Apr'94,
p.42
Why Doesn't Japan Have Daylight Saving Time? Mar/Apr'94,
p.25
Why Do Japanese Bow and Why So Much? Mar/Apr'94, p.25
Kyoto - The Cultural Heart of Japan. Jan-Feb '93,
p.7.
A Sad Song From the Whalers of Taiji. Jan-Feb '93,
p.25.
CULTURE (con’t.)
The World and Japan in Young Uchimura Kanzo's Work.
Sep.'86, p.47.
The World and Japan in Young Uchimura Kanzo's Work.
Jul.'86, p.21.
Japanese Perceptions of Physical Beauty. Jul.'86,
p.48.
Horyu-ji: Temple Complex with Two of the World's Oldest
Wooden Buildings. Mar'86, p.8.
Flowers of Edo Popular Culture. Jan'86, p.21.
The Folding Fan. Sep.'82, p.53
The Palanquin of the Gods. Sep.'82, p.34
"Ma" Space Full of Meaning in Japanese Culture. Sep.'81,
p.53
Colors in Japan. Jul.'81, p.38
The Aesthethetie of Edo's Townsmen. Jul.'81, p.44
Revengeful Spirits and the Repose of the Dead. May'81,
p.45
Japanese Musical Instruments II. Jan.'81, p.62
Japanese Musical Instruments I. Nov.'80, p.8
Heian Aristocrats' Treasures Awake From an 800 Year Sleep.
Jul.'80, p.62
CULTURAL HISTORY
Salt in a Country Where it is Scarce. Feb.'84, p.54
Why were Giant Tumuli Constructed pt.I. Jul'82, p.64
Why were Giant Tumuli Constructed pt.II. Spe.'82, p.66
From Jomon to Yayoi. May'82, p.53
Rokumeiran: A Stage for the Tragicomedy of Westernization.
Nov.'81, p.26
Japanese Farmers with Self-Esteem. Jan.'80, p.48
CULTURAL RELATIONS
A Comparison of Japanese and European Societies, pt.V.
Mar.'86, p.66.
A Comparison of Japanese and European Societies, pt.IV.
Jan.'86, p.53.
A Comparison of Japanese and European Societies, pt.III.
Nov.'85, p.53.
A Comparison of Japanese and European Societies, pt.II.
Sep.'85, p.15.
A Comparison of Japanese and European societies, pt.I.
Jul.'85, p.53.
A Comparison of Japanese and European societies.
Jun'85, p.53.
CYPRESS
Kiso, Home of Ise Shrine. Jan/Feb'90, p.26.
DARUMA
The Two Flowers of Japanese Zen. Jul/Aug'90, p.46.
DENENCHOFU
Denenchofu. Nov.-Dec.’98 p.14
DEREGULATION see: JAPAN - POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT
DETECTIVES
Staking Out a Nation: Private Detectives Find a
Haven in Japan. Jan.-Feb.’98 p.14
Japan’s First Mystery. Jan.-Feb.’98 p.25
DICTIONARIES see: ENCYCLOPEDIAS AND DICTIONARIES
DIET BUILDING
Residents of the Diet Building. Dec.'84, p.35
DISEASE see: EPIDEMICS
DOGEN
Dogen: Asserting Zazen was Buddhism Itself.
May'97, p.51
DOGS
Japan's Guide Dogs are Waiting at the Door. Sep.'97,
p.27
DOLLS see also: KOKESHI
DOGU
The Dawn of Japanese Culture. Jul/Aug'89 p.29.
DONBURI-MONO
Donburi-mono. Nov-Dec '91, p.24.
DOSOJIN
Doso-jin, the Peaceful Roadside Diety. Mar-Apr
'93, p.28.
DOTAKU see: METALWORK
see also: BELLS
DRAMATISTS, JAPANESE
The God of Japanese Playwrights. Mar-Apr '93, p.8.
DRUMS
The Japanese Drum: Getting to the Heart of the
Beat
Mar. '96 p.6
The Eerie Hand Drum. Nov/Dec'89, p.43.
EARTHQUAKE
The Great Hanshin Earthquake and the Japanese:
Reconstructuring the heart. May/June'95, p.55
The Japanese Archipelago. Aug.'88, p.32.
The Quaking Japanese Archipelago. Jul.'87, p.47.
ECHIGO
The Echigo Disturbance. Jan-Feb '94, p.7.
ECHIYEN DAIBUTSU
The Echiyen Daibutsu. Jan/Feb '89, p.25.
The Echiyen Daibutus. Nov/Dec '88, p.28.
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
The Birth of the Mitsui Empire. May-Jun '92, p.28.
Is the Japanese Market Closed? May/Jun'90, p.48.
The Impact of Information Technologies on the Japanese
Steel Industry. Sep.'85, p.5
Employment Outlook for 1985 University Graduates Rosy.
Mar.'85, p.6.
Sales of Japanese Overseas Enterprises. May'80, p.40
Employment in Japanese overseas enterprises. Mar.'80,
p.29
Japanese Overseas Investments. Jan.'80, p.34
ECONOMICS
Will the Falling Birth Rate Lead to the Fall of the Japanese
Economy? Sep-Oct '91, p.44.
The Outline of Japan-U.S. Trade Friction. May'82, p.21
The State of the Retirement System. May'82, p.65
The Dark Side of the Prospering Japanese Economy. Jul.'82,
p.9
Trade Between Japan and the European Community. Sep.'81,
p.30
The Actual Condition of Japan's Social Welfare Programs.
Sep.'81, p.57
Japan's Energy Structure. Jan'81, p.50
The North-South Problem and Japanese Development Aid.
Nov.'80, p.51
Japanese Imports of Marine Products. Jul'80, p.52.
EDO - JAPAN - HISTORY before 1867
Two Firemen Named Tatsugoro. Nov-Dec '91, p.43.
The Edo Castle Quarter. Sep-Oct '91, p.17.
EDO CASTLE
Edo Castle and the Shogun's Lifestyle. Sep/Oct
'89, p.46.
The Construction of Edo Castle. Sep.-Oct.'83, p.66
The Imperial Palace and Edo Castle. Jul.'81, p.34
The Establishment of Edo Castle. Jul.'81, p.6
EDO-MURA see: NIKKO EDO-MURA
EDO PERIOD see: NIKKO EDO-MURA MAGOME
EDUCATION
Instilling the Power to Live, Offering Latitude.
Sep.'97 p.29
The Rescue of Individuality - A Step Towards New Education.
Mar-Apr '93, p.38.
Terako-ya Inculcating Confucianism, Teaching the Three
Rs. Jul-Aug '91, p.15.
The Dilemma of Japanese Education Today, pt. II.
Jan/Feb '89, p.42.
The Dilemma of Japanese Education Today, pt.I.
Nov/Dec '88, p.42.
Education Reform. May '85, p.21.
Educational Reform During the Occupation. Sep.'81, p.53
EGAWA HIDETATSU
Egawa Hidetatsu: Tokugawa Retainer Who Fought for
Republicanism. Mar.'87, p.53.
EHIME PREFECTURE
Ehime: Haiku, Hot Springs & Pirates
EMA
Hopeful Horses. Jul.'97, p.58
EMPERORS see: KINGS, QUEENS, RULERS, etc.
ENCYCLOPEDIAS and DICTIONARIES
The Battle of the Dictionaries. Mar. '96 p.42
ENKA: see: FOLK MUSIC
ENVIRONMENT
Tokyo Gas’s Environmental Conservation Activities.
Jul.-Aug.’98 p.46
Goldman Laureate Yamashita Hirofumi. May-Jun.’98
p.4
The Guillotine Pulls on the Isahaya Tideland. Jul.'97,
p.6
Live and Let Die: The Sad Story of Japan's Endangered
Species. Sep/Oct'94, p.11
EPIDEMICS
Summers Past Become Present. Sept. '96 p.30
ETTIQUETTE see also: MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
What are Good Manners? Mar.97, p.34
EVOLUTION
Dr. Imanishi's Theory of Evolution. Feb.'84, p.10
FALCONRY
Falconry: The Warrior's Pastime. Sep-Oct '93, p.8.
FAMILIES
The Tenement Way of Life: Reflections on the Value
of the Person to Person Connection. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.7
FAMINE - FICTION
The Bagworm. Sep.'97, p.21
FANS
Kyo-Uchiwa: The Beautiful Tradition of Kyoto.
Jul.'97, p.54
FASHION
The Trend in Japanese Fashions. Aug.84, p.21.
FATE AND FATALISM
The Pheasant and the Crane, Birds of Luck. Jan.'87,
p.34.
FEMINISTS
Feminist Kamichika Ichiko. Jul/Aug'89, p.17.
FESTIVALS
The Takayama Festival. May-Jun.’98 p.37
The "Art of the Pitch" and the "Marketplace of Stalls"
(shrine and temple fairs). Sep.'97, p.46
Tanabata: Starry-Eyes About Edo. Jul. '96
p.51
Off the Beaten Path. Sept. '96 p.49
Off the Beaten Path. Nov. '96 p.49
Giving Thanks to the Bear: The Ainu and Iyomante.
May/June'94, p.6
The Economics of Festivals. May'86, p.5.
The Origin and Essence of Shinto Festivals. Sep.'84,
p.9
Kyoto's Daimonji Okuri-bi. Aug.'84, p.28
FICTION
A Memory of Fire by Matsumoto Seicho. Jan. '96
p.17
Yumiura-shi. Mar. '96 p.38
The Sakai Incident. May '96 p.12
FICTION (con’t.)
The Bears of Mt. Nametoko. Jul. '96 p.25
A Tobacco Lover. Nov. '96 p.47
The Camellia. Nov. '96 p.57
FILM
Popular Symbol of Humanity and Humor (Tora-san). Nov.'82,
p.13
FISHES
Iwana. Jul.'97, p.56
The Goldfish. Jul-Aug '91, p.20.
Nishiki-goi, Carp in a Spectrum of Colors. Mar.'87,
p.29.
Globefish Toxin, More Valuable than Gold. Mar.'86,
p.19.
FISHING
Cormorant Fishing: Fascinating but Ultimately Sad.
May/Jun'95, p.6
FLOWER ARRANGEMENT
The Kakitsubata. Sept.-Oct.’98 p.26
The Pine. Jan.-Feb.’98 p.34
Japanese Rhodea: A Pure, Noble Plant for Festive
Occasions. Jan.'97, p.36
Fox Face (a yellow fruit). Sep.'97, p.32
The Ha-botan: A Fireball Cluster of Beautifully
Tinged
Leaves. Jan. '96 p.32
The Cockscomb: Red to Color the Japanese Autumn.
Sept. '96 p.32
The Persimmon - Ideal for Representing the Autumn Harvest.
Sep/Oct'95, p.32
The Camellia Blossoms of Profound Beauty. Jan/Feb'95,
p.28
The Chestnut Giving Poetic Charm to Autumn. Sep/Oct'94,
p.36
The Narcissus. Jan-Feb '94, p.28.
The Chrysanthemum - Elegant Flower Symbolizing Long Life.
Jan-Feb '93, p.36.
The Lotus - A Symbol of the Buddha's Mind. Sep-Oct
'92, p.28.
Association of Ideas Through Flowers. Jan-Feb '92,
p.22.
The Nandina - A Shrub that Works Like a Charm.
Jan-Feb '91, p.36.
The Bush Clover. 88 Sep-Oct, p.28.
Snow, Moon, and Flowers. Jan '88, p.32.
The Gathering for Admiring Chrysanthemums Remaining.
Sep.'87, p.32.
Flowers to Decorate a Drawing From. Jan.'87, p.32.
Seven Flowers of Autumn. Sep.'86, p.32.
An Affectionate Regard for Flowers. Feb.'85, p.40.
The Camellia. Mar.-Apr.'90, p.32.
FLOWER ARRANGEMENT (con’t.)
Ikebana Along the Silk Road. Oct. '84, p.40
Flowers and a Sense of the Season. Feb.'84, p.40
Aesthetics in a Violent Age. Sep/Oct '83, p.32
Deities and Flowers for the New Year. Jan'83, p.40
Living Flowers. Sep.'82, p.40
Three Plants for Celebrating New Year's. Jan.82, p.32
Something New in Traditional New Year Arrangements.
Jan.'80, p.32
FOLK DANCING
The "Sehishi Odori" of Hanamaki. Oct.'84, p.38
FOLK MEDICINE
Yojokun, Part 8: Taking Care of the Elderly - Edo Precepts
for Health. Jan-Feb '94, p.47.
Yojokun, Part 7: Using Medicine - Edo Precepts for Health.
Nov-Dec '93, p.46.
Yojokun, Part 6: On Maintaining Health. Sep-Oct
'93, p.46.
Yojokun, Part 5: Personal Hygiene. Jul-Aug '93,
p.49.
Yojokun, Part 4: On Eating and Drinking. May-Jun '93,
p.46.
Yojokun, Part 3: On Eating and Drinking. Mar-Apr'93,
p.42.
Yojokun, Part 2: Edo Precepts for Good Health.
Jan-Feb '93,
p.45.
Yojokun, Part 1: Edo Precepts for Good Health.
Nov-Dec '92, p.41.
The Vivid Beauty of Scarlet Maple Leaves. Sep-Oct
'91, p.36.
FOLK MUSIC
Enka - Japan's Elegiac Ballads. Mar-Apr, p.7.
FOLKLORE/SUPERSTITION
Nihon Ryoiki. (classic Japanese teaching stories).
Vol. II, Part 14. Jul.-Aug. p.17
Nihon Ryoiki. Vol. II, Part 13. Mar.-Apr.
p.32
Nihon Ryoiki. Vol. II, Part 12. Jan.-Feb.
p.32
Nihon Ryoiki. Sept.’97 p.59
Nihon Ryoiki. Jul.’97 p.61
Nihon Ryoiki. May ‘97, p.58
Nihon Ryoiki. Mar.'97, p.36
Nihon Ryoiki. Nov.’96 p.59
Nihon Ryoiki. Sept.’96 p.57
Nihon Ryoiki. Jul.’96 p.56
Nihon Ryoiki. May ‘96 p.58
Nihon Ryoiki. Mar.’96 p.55
Nihon Ryoiki. Jan.’96 p.50
Spirits with a Grudge - Yurei, the Ghosts of Japan. May/June'94,
p.13
FOLKLORE/SUPERSTITION (con’t.)
The Place of Curses. Jul.’82 p.34
FOOD
Iwana (fish). JUL.'97, p.56
Tako-yaki (Octopus). Mar. '96 p.27
Mochi: A Taste of the Devine. Nov/Dec'95, p.21
Tonkatsu: A Cut Above the Rest. Sep/Oct'95, p.35
Instant Ramen. Mar/Apr'94, p.36
Food and Health: An Invitation to Japanese-Style Meals.
Nov-Dec '93, p.36.
The Charm of Soy Sauce. Sep-Oct '93, p.36.
Shoyu! The Soul of Japanese Cuisine. Sep-Oct '92,
p.58.
Dried Bonito. May-Jun '92, p.24.
Sushi. Jan-Feb '92, p.33.
Donburi-mono. Nov-Dec '91, p.24.
Somen - Pasta Made in White Threads. Jul-Aug '91,
p.41.
The Daikon. Sep-Oct '91, p.22.
Makunouchi Bento. May-Jun '91, p.52.
The Japanese and Rice. Mar-Apr '91, p.48.
The Story of Grated Yam Dishes. Jan-Feb.'91, p.48
Konbu and Dried Bonito, Two Materials for Japanese Stock.
Nov-Dec'90, p.46
Okonomiyaki. Sep-Oct'90, p.46.
The History of Tofu. Jul-Aug'90, p.25.
The Mysteries of Shoyu. May-Jun'90, p.24.
The Taste of a Food in Season. Jul-Aug'89, p.24.
O-nigiri, The Instant Rice Dish. May-Jun'89, p.26.
A Tsukushi Dish to Savor Spring. Mar-Apr'89, p.49.
Oden. Pabulum Populi. Jan'88, p.28.
Osechi: Dishes for the New Year. Nov'87, p.32.
How to Enjoy Sushi. Sep'87, p.29.
Senbei, Cracker of a Thousand Local Flavors. Sep'86,
p.28.
Agar: A Traditional Dietary Food. Sep'86, p.34.
The Paulownia Chest of Drawers. Jul'86, p.32.
Beginner's Shogi. Nov.'87, p.58.
The Head Go Society. Sep'85, p.13.
Katsuobushi. Sep.'84, p.13
The Japanese Taste for Tuna. Mar.'84, p.63
Vegetable Soup a la Japan. Feb.'84, p.44
Serve-Yourself Hodge Podge of Chicken and Vegetables.
Nov.'83, p.40
The Zen Flavor of Miso. Jan.'83, p.21
The Persimmon - A Fruit of the Winter. Jan.'83, p.36
"Shojin" Dishes. Jul.'82, p.44
Umeboshi and Nigiri Meshi, Jan.'82, p.14
The "Natto" Sales Boy. Mar.'82, p.40
A Delicious Food From Soybean. Mar.'82, p.20
Sweep Away the Sand in Your Belly. Nov.'81, p.18
FOOD (con’t.)
Even When Stale, Sea Brean Tastes Best. Sep.'81, p.18
The Story of Tofu. Jul.'81, p.14
An Invitation to "Soba". May'81, p.31
The Unlucky Blowfish. Mar.'81, p.31
The Pursuit of Freshness. Sep.'81, p.40
FOOTBALL see: SOCCER
X-League: A New Corporate League. Jan.’97
p.59
FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Diplomatic Negotiations: A Japanese View of the Negotiating
Table, pt.II. May/June'95, p. 18
Diplomatic Negotiations: A Japanese View of the
Negotiating
Table, pt. I. Mar.-Apr.’95 p.22
FUEL
How Studying Abroad Led to a Project to Convert Water
to
Fuel. Jan.
'96 p.45
FUGEN
Fugen - Mountains of Fire. Mar-Apr '92, p.48.
FUJIMORI, ALBERTO
President Fujimori. May-Jun '92, p.15.
FUJI SAN
A Different Sort of Pilgrimage. Sep.'97, p.34
FUJIWARA NO MICHINAGA
The Power and the Glory of Fujiwara no Michinaga.
May-Jun '92, p.50.
FUKUOKA
Fukuoka Modern Industries, Old Code of Loyalty and Justice.
May'83, p.38
GAMES
Shogi: A Game of War with No Casualties. Mar/Apr'94,
p.42
GARDEN
Garden to View. Apr'85, p.36.
Japanese Garden Art. Mar.'84, p.38
GENTIAN
The Gentian Limpoid Beauty, Stalwart Survivors. Sep-Oct,
p.36.
GIFT WRAPPING
Miyuhiki - Symbols of the Purification of a Gift.
Jan'86, p.42.
GINGER
Cover Detail. Mar-Apr '92, p.3.
GISHI Wajin-den
Gishi Washin-den, The Oldest Extant Description of Japan.
Jan-Feb'90, p.7.
GLASS
Edo Kiri-ko (cut glass). Sep.'97, p.25
GODS
Kishi-mojin, The Goddess of Children. May'88, p.24.
GOLDEN, ARTHUR S. see: MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA: REVIEW
GRANT, GENERAL ULYSSES S.
General Grant in Japan. Sep.'81, p.58
GUIDE DOGS see: DOGS
GYOKI
Gyoki; A High Priest for the People. May-Jun '93,
p.40.
HAKAMA
Hakama - A Symbol of Samurai's Might and Women's Right.
Mar-Apr '92, p.36.
HAL
A Cool Gal Named Hal. May-Jun.’98 p.6
HANDWRITING
Returning Clouds - A Bokuseki by Zen Priest Wu-chun Shih-
Fan. May-Jun'90, p.36.
HANIWA
Haniwa. May '96 p.32
HANTEN
Conveying the Chicness of Edo. Jan-Feb '94, p.26.
HARAJUKU
Harajuku. May-Jun.’98 p.28
HATTORI HANZO
Ninja Hattori Hanzo. Mar-Apr '91, p.28.
HEALTH
Islands of the Longevous: Why Okinawans Live Longer than
Anyone Else. Nov/Dec'94, p.54
HEPBURN, AUDREY
An Audrey Hepburn Holiday. May-Jun.’98 p.55
HEPBURN, JAMES
The Unknown Achievements of Dr. Hepburn. Nov'87, p.6.
HERALDRY
Family Crests. Nov-Dec '93, p.14.
HIGUCHI ICHIYO
Higuchi Ichiyo: A Woman Who Countered Prejudice with
Pride Jan-Feb '92, p.11.
HIMEJI CASTLE
Himeji Castle. Jul-Aug'90, p.38.
HIRAGA GENNAI
Hiraga Ginnai - Genius, Opportunist, and Madman.
Mar-Apr '92, p.7.
HIROSHIGE
Hiroshige, Ukiyo-e and the Japanese Spirit. May-Jun
'92, p.32.
HIROSHIMA
Hiroshima: Military Capital, Atomic Bomb, City of Peace.
Nov.'81, p.46
HISHIKAWA MORONOBU
Edo Fuyoku Emaki. Nov-Dec'89, p.36.
HOKKAIDO
The Mountains of Hokkaido. Sep-Oct'88, p.26.
Hokkaido: A Prefecture in Transition. Jun'85, p.26.
The Hidden Story of Hokkaido's Settlement. Apr.'85, p.22.
HOKKAIDO (con’t.)
Hokkaido: Land of the Ainu, Final Battleground for Tokugawa
Retainers. Dec.'84, p.29
HOKUCHI
Hannawa Hokuchi - A Great Scholar Who Overcame Blindness.
Nov-Dec '93, p.40.
HOKUSAI
Ukiyo-e Painter Katsushika Hokusai. Jul-Aug '91,
p.32.
HOLIDAYS
Carp Streamers (Boys' Day). Mar. '96 p.32
Bonen-kai and Entropies. Sep-Oct'88, p.48.
HOMOSEXUALITY
Samurai in Love, Samurai Out of Work. May-Jun'90,
p.7.
HORSES
Hopeful Horses (clever advertisement using Ema for horse
racing). Jul.'97, p.58
HOTELS, MOTELS, ETC.
The Japanese Inn Group: Providing (foreigners)
A Taste of the Traditional Japanese Life-Style. Jan.'97, p.38
The Spirit of Sekitei. Sep-Oct'89, p.40.
HOUSES
Hybrid-Z: A House for the 21st Century. Sept.-Oct.’98
p.34
Japanese Housing Over th4e Centuries. Sept.-Oct.’98
p.30
Traditional Houses and the Japanese View of Life.
Mar-Apr '91, p.55.
IKEBANA see: FLOWER ARRANGEMENT
IMAI, ERIKA
The Art of Imai, Erika. Jul.'97, p.25
IMAMURA, SHOHEI
Imamura Shohei (movie director). Nov.-Dec.’98 p.10
IMANISHI KINJI
Dr. Imanishi's Theory of Evolution. Feb/Mar '84, p.10
IMPERIAL PLAZA
Burnt Ruins Beneath the Blue Sky. Jul/Aug'95, p.49
INDUSTRY
From Buddha to Biotech - The Evolving Relationship of
the Japanese and the Pearl. May/June'94, p.35
The Positive and Negative Aspects of Japanese Technology.
Apr'85, p.49.
Faith in Authority is Nonsense. Mar'85, p.18.
The Japanese Subcontracting System. Oct.'84, p.18
Total Quality Control - Japanese Preventive for Blue-Collar
Blues. Feb.'84, p.6
Historical Overview of Cultural Supposition in Japanese
Management. Jan.'83, p.53
http://archipelago.net: The Internet Comes to Japan.
Nov. '96 p.12
Japanese Management in Historical Perspective.
Dec'83/Jan'84, p.6
The Turning Point for the Automotive Industry. Jan.'82,
p.63
Japan: The New Watch Empire. Nov.'81, p.57
The Autmobile Industry at a Turning Point. Jul.'80, p.41
Camera - How Cameras Came to Japan
Video. Mar.'80, p.32
INDUSTRY - ECONOMIC ASPECTS
High-Speed Management in High Tech Industries.
Jul.'84, p.6
INLAND SEA
Marine Warriors. Jul-Aug '93, p.9.
INO TADATAKA
Ino Tadataka Forty Million Steps to Fame. Jan-Feb
'94, p.37.
INTERNATIONAL SCHOOLS
Japan’s Int’l. Schools: Attracting Children with
Dreams of International Careers. Jan.-Feb.’98 p.6
INUKAI, ISUYOSHI
The Life and Death of Inukai Isuyoshi, a Passionate
Statesman. Sep.'81, p.21
ISAHAYA BAY
Goldman Laureate Yamashita Hirofumi. May-Jun.’98
p.4
The Guillotine Falls on the Isahaya Tideland. Jul.'97,
p.6
ISE
The Kojiki and Ise Jingu. Nov-Dec '93, p.28.
Kiso, Home of Ise Shrine. Jan-Feb'90, p.26.
ISHIDA BAIGAN
Birth of a Philosophy for Merchants. Nov-Dec'90,
p.53.
ISHIKAWA
Winter in Ishikawa's Onsen-Machi. Jan.'97, p.57
ISLANDS
The Japanese Archipelago. Aug'85, p.32.
Southernmost Japanese Island Nearly Submerged Beneath
the Pacific. Aug'88, p.31.
The Ogasawara Islands: Where the Japanese Speak English.
May'88, p.30.
The Isles West of Hokkaido. Jan'88, p.34.
Goto: Isles at the Western Extremity. Nov.'87, p.34.
OKI, Isles to Which Emperors were Exiled. Sep'87, p.21.
Yakushima. Jul'87, p.43.
Tanegashima. May'87, p.30.
The Izu-shichito, Seven Isles Myriad Legends. Mar'87,
p.36.
Tsushima: Isles at the Border. Jan'87, p.45.
Sado: Gilded Island of Elegant Exiles. Mar'86, p.32.
ISSA
A Cup of Tea for Issa. Nov.'97, p.15
IVY
Cover Detail. May-Jun '93, p.3.
IWASAKI KISAKU
Snow Falling From the Past Onto Paper: The Art
of Iwasaki
Kisaku. Nov. '96 p.28
IWATE PREFECTURE
Tripping to Iihatobu: Miyazawa Kenji's Iwate.
Ju. '96 p.29
IZU
Miyakejima. Jan-Feb '93, p.40.
IZUMO
The Heart Remembers Izumo. Jan.'97, p.6
JAPAN ANTIQUITIES
The Path to Mythology. Mar-Apr '90, p.25.
The Dawn of Japanese Culture. Jul-Aug'89, p.29.
JAPAN - ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
From Process Innovation to Product Innovation. Aug'88,
p.11.
Jiageya, The Capital Problem of Tokyo. May'88,
p.6.
The Growth Strategies of Japanese Companies. Jul'87,
p.6.
JAPAN - ECONOMIC CONDITIONS (con’t.)
The Strong Yen Aggravates the Recession. May'87, p.6.
Commencement: A Rite of Passage into the Real World.
Mar.'87, p.6.
JAPAN - FICTION see: FICTION
also: each issue usually has
1 short story
JAPAN - FOREIGN RELATIONS - KOREA
The Opening of the Hermit Kingdom, 1866-1882. Jan'88,
p.53.
JAPAN HISTORIANS
Asakawa Kanichi - A Japanese Tragedy: The Story of an
Unknown Historian. Jan/Feb'84, p.46
JAPAN - HISTORY TO 1868 see also: ARCHAEOLOGY
Shomu: Buddhist on the Throne. Sept.-Oct.’98
p.54
Shotoku Taishi: Japan's Buddhist Role Model and
Midwife of
Wa. Sept. '96 p.51
The Echigo Disturbance. Jan-Feb '94, p.7.
Creating a Legend. Nov-Dec '93, p.7.
The Power and the Glory of Fujiwara no Michinaga.
May-Jun '92, p.50.
Taira no Masakada Persona and True Self in Conflict.
Sep-Oct '91, p.53.
The Edo Castle Question. Sep-Oct '91, p.17.
Captain John Kendrick, The First American in Japan.
Mar-Apr '91, p.34.
The Feudal System of Edo. Mar-Apr '91, p.20.
The Tragedy of Chosokabe Motochika. Sep-Oct'90,
p.16.
Yamatai relocates in eastern Japan. May-Jun'90, p.27.
The Path to Mythology. Mar'90, p.25.
The History of the House of Sumitomo. Mar-Apr'90, p.25.
The Yayoi Japanese. Sep-Oct'89, p.34.
Edo Castle and the Shogun's Lifestyle. Sep-Oct'89, p.46.
The Dawn of Japanese Culture. Jul-Aug'89, p.29.
City of the Shogun. May-Jun'89, p.16.
The Demise of the Toyotomi. Mar-Apr'89, p.26.
Death of Hideyoshi. Jan-Feb'89, p.10
The Long Road to Supreme Power. Nov-Dec'88, p.18.
The Tebellion at Honno-ji. Sep-Oct'88, p.55.
Fighting Nobunaga. Aug'88, p.39.
In Japan, East is East and West is West. May'88, p.5.
Heroes of the Unification of the Country. May'88, p.45.
Mori Motonari, War-Daimyo in Western Japan. Jan'85, p.46.
The Fate of the War - Daimyos. Nov'87, p.21.
The Russo-Japanese War in America. Sep'87, p.38.
Hojo Ujiyasu the Tactitian. Jul'87, p.34
JAPAN - HISTORY - TO 1868 (con’t.)
War-Daimyo Hojo Soun. May'87, p.24.
The Uprisings of the Ikko Sect. Mar'87, p.21.
The Rise and Decline of a City-State in Medieval Japan.
Jan'87, p.21.
The Wako: Mysterious Pirates in East Asia. Sep'86, p.21.
Higurashi Suzuri. Sep'86, p.62.
Edo in the Closing Days of the Shogunate. Jul'86, p.14
Fall of the Kamakura Shogunate. Mar'86, p.14.
Fall of the Kamakura Shogunate. Jan.'86, p.16.
Merchants in Their Prime - Birth of Commercialism. Sep'85,
p.21.
Mystery of the Mongol Invasions. Jul'85, p.9.
"Menoto" - Fountainheads of Fealty. Feb.'84, p.12
From Jomon to Yayoi. May'82, p.53
What Really Happened at the Battle of Sekigahara. Jul.'82,
p.53
The Mysteries of the Jomon Period. Jan.'82, p.39
The Prosperity of Vice - The Facts About Kokushi. May'81,
p.53
The Way of Japanese Chonin. Mar.'81, p.45
JAPAN - HISTORY - 1868-1945.
The Good, the Bad, and the Arrogant - Crucial Moments
Between 1868-1941. Mar-Apr '92, p.16.
The Shimagu and the Satsuma Spirit. Jan-Feb '91,
p.7.
Dr. Morrison's War. Mar-Apr'89, p.5.
The Tragedy of General Nogi. Mar-Apr'89, p.11.
The Opening of the Hermit Kingdom 1866-1882. Jan'88,
p.53.
The Capital in Flames (Tokyo during the war years). May'87,
p.48.
Tokyo in the Meiji Era. Jan'87, p.5.
The Tragedy of a Man Who Knew. Sep.'84, p.53
The Tragedy of a Man Who Knew. Jul.'84, p.10 A Japanese
Tragedy: The Story of an Unknown Historian. Feb.'84, p.46
Postwar Family Relations. Jan.'82, p.7
The Labor Policy of GHQ. Nov.'81, p.5
Rokumeikan: A Stage for Westernization. Nov.'81, p.26
Educational Reform During the Occupation. Sep.'81, p.53
Tragedy at Leyte. Nov.'80, p.17
Japan Relinquishes Hegemony in the Pacific. Jul.'80,
p.55
The Outbreak of the Pacific War. May'80, p.58
The Eve of the Pacific War pt.I. Jan.'80, p.6
The Eve of the Pacific War pt.II. Mar.'80, p.6
The Birth of Fascism. Nov.'79, p.6
The White Tiger Band: A Tragedy of Child Soldiers.
Nov/Dec.'95, p.15
JAPAN - HISTORY - 1945-
The Tragedy of Settlers in Manchukuo. Jul-Aug'89, p.46.
A Constitution Emerges From the Ruins. May'81,
p.6
The Surrender of Japan. Sep.'81, p.8
JAPAN - HISTORY - FICTION
The Sakai Incident. May '96 p.12
JAPAN HUMANE SOCIETY
Ethel Fairmont Snyder, Mary Elkinton Nitobe and the Founding
of the Japan Humane Society. Jan.’97 p.13
JAPAN - POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT
The Beauty and the Burden of Democracy. Jul.-Aug.’98
p.4
Deregulation in Japan. May'97, p.46
JAPAN TODAY
The Battle Among Hotels. Oct.'83, p.35
There is No Business Like the Wedding Business. Nov.'81,
p.34
The Challenge for Kobe City. Jan.'81, p.31
JAPANESE ALPS
Men Captivated by the Japanese Alps. Sep-Oct'89, p.7.
JAPANESE FICTION see: FICTION
JAPANESE FILM
The Darkness of Godzilla. Sep/Oct.'95, p.28
JAPANESE INNS
Japanese Inns. Jan-Feb '92, p.25.
JAPANESE LANGUAGE see also:
KANJI
Progressive and Perfect. Nov.-Dec.’98 p.16
Quotation: Thinking in Japanese. Sept.-Oct.’98
p.18
Counting and Measuring. Jul.-Aug.’98 p.55
Commands and Requests. May-Jun.’98 p.61
Noun Modification. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.56
This Article’s Unique (on the “uniqueness of Japanese).
Mar.-Apr.’98 p.54
Questions and Answers. Jan.-Feb.’98 p.45
Parts of Speech. Jan.'97, p.17
Words that Have Aged Well. Jan.'97, p.40
America the "Rice Country"? Jan.'97, p.63
Complex Syllables. Mar.'97, p.17
Watch What "iu" (kanji) Says. Mar.'97, p.41
Simple Sentences. May'97, p.17
Kanji. Jul.'97, p.18
JAPANESE LANGUAGE (con’t.)
Negation. Sep.'97, p.36
Honorifics (keigo) in Transition. Sep.'97, p.43
"Be" and "Have". Nov.'97, p.68
The Council on the National Language. Jan. '96
p.24
Bleeping "Crazy"...Discriminatory Language. May
'96 p.53
Honorific Expressions. Sep. '96 p.38
Simple Syllables. Nov. '96 p.18
Bleeping "Crazy":...Discriminatory Language. May
'96 p.53
The Internationalization of the Japanese Language.
Mar/Apr'95, p.48
Three Rahs for Words Without Ra. Nov/Dec'95, p.30
Yoroshiku. Sep-Oct '93, p.26.
Mushi. Sep-Oct '93, p.27.
Key to Understanding the Japanese - Saying "I".
Jul-Aug '93, p.46.
JAPANESE LITERATURE
The Edo Period as an Antidote to Modernism. Mar.-Apr.’98
p.20
On Translation of Modern Japanese Literature. Mar.'97,
p.38
The Peaks and Valleys of a Life and Mind. Jul.
'96 p.13
Postwar Japanese Literature and the Contemporary Impasse.
Mar. '87 p.64
The Historical Context of Postwar Japanese Literature.
Dec. '84, p.44
The Prosperity of Vice. May '81, p.53
Dejima: Small Gate to a Closed Country. Mar. '81,
p.60
JEWELRY
Oriental Gems. May/June'95, p.25
JIAGEYA
Jiageya, The Capital Problem of Tokyo. May'88, p.6.
JINRIKISHA
The Jinrikisha Story. Mar.'97, p.21
The Jinrikisha Story. Jan.'97, p.25
The Jinrikisha Story. Nov. '96 p.6
JISHUKU
Jishuku (Self-Restraint) the Japanese Reaction to the
Sickness and Death of the Emperor. Mar-Apr'89, p.24.
JOURNALISM
Kairakutei Black. Nov. '96 p.41
JUDO
The Soft Way to Success: Judo as Philosophy and
Sport.
Jul. '96 p.6
KAFU see: Nagai Kafu
KAGOSHIMA
Kagoshima: Repository of the Samurai Spirit. Apr.'84,
p.21
KAISEKI
Tasting the Blessings of Nature. May-Jun '93, p.36.
Japanese Cuisine for Social Gatherings. May-Jun'89, p.28.
KAKINOMOTO NO HITOMARU
Kakinomoto no Hitomaru Master of the Elegy. May-Jun'89,
p.21.
KAMAKURA
Kamakura in Purple and White (mostly photos). Mar.'97,
p.57
Kamakura Cinema World. Sep. '96 p.28
KAMICHIKA ICHIKO
Feminist Kamichika Ichiko. Jul-Aug'89, p.17.
KANJI
Threads of Kanji Logic. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.53
Requisites for a Lady. Nov.’96 p.40
Is the Son-In-Law a Woman? Sept.’96 p.35
Even People Can Be Insects. Jul.’96 p.60
Who Did the Work in the Field? May ‘96 p.23
Scaling the Kanji Mountain. Jan. '96 p.63
Snowscapes. May-Jun '93, p.29.
The Hair of Princess Kaguya. Mar-Apr '93, p.40.
Playing and Singing for Dieties. Jan'88, p.60.
KARAOKE see: MUSIC
KATSUHIRA TOKUSHI
Katsuhira Tokushi. Jan'87, p.39.
KAZUO ISHIGURO
The Novelist in Today's World. May-Jun'90, p.54.
KENDRICK, CAPT. JOHN
Captain John Kendrick, The First American in Japan.
Mar-Apr '91, p.34.
KENZAN
The Meditative Spirit as Expressed in Kenyan's Picture
Plates. Jan-Feb'90, p.36.
KIDNAPPING
The Abducted Japanese Inmates in Kim Jony Il's Korea.
May'97, p.41
KIMONO see: CLOTHING AND DRESS
KINGS, QUEENS, RULERS, ETC.
Shomu: Buddhist on the Throne. Sept.-Oct.’98
p.54
Tenmu: The Self-Inventing Emperor. Mar.-Apr.’98
p.45
The Japanese and the Emperor - An Unbroken Tradition.
May-Jun '93, p.8.
KISHI-MOJIN
Kishi-Mojin, The Goddess of Children. May'88, p.24.
KISO
The Storied Kiso Road (and Kiso area). Nov.'97,
p.21
Kiso, Home of the Shrine. Jan-Feb'90, p.26.
The Road and Post Towns of Kiso. Nov-Dec.'89, p.28.
KOCHI PREFECTURE
Kochi: Prefecture of People Who Enjoy Arguing, Drinking,
& Action Sep.'82, p.23
KOI NOBORI see: CARP STREAMERS
KOJIKI
Birth of the Kojiki. Sep-Oct'90, p.14.
KOKESHI
Miyagi Kokeshi. Sep.'97, p.26
KOREA
The Abducted Japanese Inmates in Kim Jong Il's Korea.
May '97, p.41
KORIN, OGATA
Sotatsu and Korin - Two Flowers of Japanese Painting.
Sep-Oct '92, p.31.
KOUMI LINE
The Koumi Line (2 car train in Eastern Nagano).
Nov.'97, p.35
KUMAMOTO
Kumamoto: The Land of Fire. Feb.'84, p.27
KYOTO
Aquatic Kyoto. Jul.-Aug.’98 p.32
Cityscape and Landscape in Harmony: The Living Work of
Art Which is Kyoto. Jul/Aug'94, p.6
Kyoto - The Cultural Heart of Japan. Jan-Feb '93,
p.7.
The Amida Nyorai of Byodo-in Temple. Jul-Aug '92,
p.11.
Kyoto's Daimonji Okuri-Bi. Aug.'84, p.28
KYUSHU
The Kumano Magaibutsu. Jan-Feb '93, p.30.
Kyushu - The Ancient Gateway to Japan. Jan.'83, p.38
LACQUER & LACQUERING
Maki-e Traditional Artistic Handicraft Born in Japan.
Jul-Aug '93, p.32.
Maki-e Lacquerware Design Par Excellence. Sep'85, p.31.
Japanese Lacquer Ware Art. Nov.'82, p.44
LAKE NOJIRI see: NOJIRI
LAND USE
The Time Lease of Land. Jul-Aug.’98 p.10
LATTICES
The Beauty of Japanese Architecture. Jul-Aug '93,
p.25.
LAW
New Foreigners, An Antiquated Immigration Policy.
Nov/Dec'94, p.48
The Japanese Perception of Contracts. May'87, p.12.
Civil Suits in Edo. Jan'87, p.59.
Criminal Trials in Edo. Jul'86, p.53.
LEARNING AND SCHOLARSHIPS
Motoori Norinaga, A Scholar-Physician Who Loved Cherry
Blossoms. May-Jun'90, p.18.
Arai Hokuseki, An Internationalist Samurai in the Age
of National Seclusion. Mar-Apr'90, p.52.
LIGHTING
The History of Japanese Lighting pt.3. Sep-Oct
'91, p.29.
The History of Japanese Lighting pt.2. Jul-Aug
'91, p.25.
The History of Japanese Lighting pt.1. May-Jun
'91, p.7.
LITERATURE - CLASSICS
Nanso Satomi Hakkenden Part 1. Mar/Apr'94, p.14
Nanso Satomi Hakkenden Part 2. May/June'94, p.19
Nanso Satomi Hakkenden Part 3. Jul/Aug'94, p.38
Nanso Satomi Hakkenden Part 4. Sep/Oct'94, p.18
Nanso Satomi Hakkenden Part 5. Nov/Dec'94, p.18
Nanso Satomi Hakkenden Part 6. Jan/Feb'95, p.37
Nanso Satomi Hakkenden Part 7. Mar/Apr'95, p.12
Nanso Satomi Hakkenden Part 8. May/Jun'95, p.12
Nanso Satomi Hakkenden Part 9. Jul/Aug'95, p.14
Nihon Ryoiki Vol.I. Nov/Dec'95, p.40
From Konjaku Monogatari - Part 14. May'81, p.68
From Konjaku Monogatari - Part 13. Mar.'81, p.68
From Konjaku Monogatari - Part 11. Nov.'80, p.68
From Konjaku Monogatari - Part 10. Sep.'80, p.68
From Konjaku Monogatari - Part 9. Jul'80, p.64
From Konjaku Monogatari - Part 8. May'80, p.66
From Konjaku Monogatari - Part 7. Mar.'80 p.60
LOTUS
Cover Detail. Sep-Oct '92, p.3.
The Lotus - A Symbol of the Buddha's Mind. Sep-Oct
'92, p.28.
LUCIDOPHYLLOUS FOREST
The Lucidophyllous Forest Culture Zone. Jan-Feb
'91, p.14.
MAGOME
A Stroll Through History, Literature and Nature.
Sept. '96 p.6
MAKI-E
Maki-e Traditional Artistic Handicraft Born in Japan.
Jul-Aug '93, p.32.
MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
Japanese Culture Through the Lens of Manga. Nov/Dec '95,
p.51
The Furoshiki: Amagic Cloth. Nov/Dec'95, p.33
Manga: Laughter Unmuzzled: From Ponchi Pictures to Manga.
Jul/Aug'95, p.32
Tezuka Osamu: Father of Postwar Manga Culture. Sep/Oct'95,
p.6
Kaiseki - Japanese Cuisine for Social Gatherings. May-
Jun'89, p.28.
Rites of Passage. Mar-Apr'89, p.20.
MANNERS AND CUSTOMS (con’t.)
The Japanese Peculiar Way of Sitting. Jan-Feb'89, p.5.
How to Use Chopsticks. Jan-Feb'89, p.52.
Makeup Methods and Utensils of Edo Period. Jul'87, p.29.
Some Reflections on the Shopping Patterns of Japanese
Housewives. Sep.'85, p.38.
A Tale of Revenge. Sep.'84, p.64
Fathers and Sons Related by "Eboshi". May'84, p.12
"En", The Starting Point of Groupism. Feb.'84, p.60
Why Do Japanese Find It Easy to Apologize? Nov/Dec'83,
p.21
Why the Japanese Did Not Use Chairs. Oct.'83, p.43
MAPS
Ino Tadataka. Jan-Feb '94, p.37.
MARRIAGE CUSTOMS AND RITES
The Bartered Brides of the Edo Period. Jul-Aug
'92, p.46.
MARTIAL ARTS see also: JUDO, etc.
The Way to Kannon: The Spiritual Aspects of Kendo.
Mar/Apr'95, p.6
Ninja Hattori Hanzo. Mar-Apr '91, p.28.
Japanese Archery. Aug.'83, p.68
An Exercise in Concentration. Jul.'83, p.68
MASAKADO
Taira no Masakado - Persona and True Self in Conflict.
Sep-Oct'91, p.53.
MATSUI SUMAKO
Japan's First Modern Actress. May-Jun '91, p.17.
MATSURI see: FESTIVALS
MATSUMOTO
Matsumoto. Nov.'97, p.44
MEDICINE - RESEARCH
Noguchi Hideyo. Nov-Dec'89, p.20.
MEIJI SHRINE
Meiji Shrine. Jul.-Aug.’98 p.30
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA: REVIEW
Dear Mr. Golden: A Review of Memoirs of a Geisha.
Nov.-Dec.’98 p.23
MERCHANTS
Birth of a Philosophy for Merchants. Nov-Dec'90, p.53.
METALWORK see also: BELLS
The Yayoi Japanese. Sep-Oct'89, p.34.
Mysterious Ancient Mirrors: Triangular-Edged Mirrors
with Designs of Dieties and Animals. Jul/Aug'89, p.36.
MICHIYANE, SUGAWARA NO
A God for All Seasons. Nov-Dec '92, p.8.
MIE
Mie: Homeland of the Sun Goddess; The Luster of Pearls.
May'80, p.21
MINKA
The Beauty of Japanese Architecture Tradition and Creation.
Jul-Aug '93, p.25.
MIRRORS
Mysterious Ancient Mirrors: Triangular-Edged Mirrors
with Designs of Dieties and Animals. Jul/Aug'89, p.36.
MISHIMA YUKIO
Mishima Yukio as Living Icon. Sep/Oct'95, p.38
MISSIONARIES
The Community Atop the Mountain of the Gods. Nov.'97,
p.53
MITSUI, TAKATOSHI
The Birth of the Mitsui Empire. May-Jun '92, p.28
MIURA TAMAKI
Muira Tamaki, Prima Donna of Japan. Nov-Dec'90, p.22.
MIYAKEJIMA
Miyakejima. Jan-Feb '93, p.40.
MIYAZAKI
Miyazaki: The Land Facing the Sun. Jun.'84, p.40
MIYAZAWA, KENJI
The Peaks and Valleys of a Life and Mind. Jul.
'96 p.13
MOKICHI OKADA
Paradise on Earth - The Life of Okada Mokichi, pt. I.
May/Jun'94, p. 26
Birth of a Religion of Beauty: Life of Okada Mokichi,
pt.II. Jul/Aug'94, p.24
MONEY
Money. May-Jun'90, p.44.
MONKEYS
Bathing With the Monkeys at Jigokudani. Mar. '96
p.12
MONZAEMON
The God of Japanese Playwrights. Mar-Apr '93, p.8.
MORRISON PAPERS
Dr. Morrison's War. Mar-Apr'89, p.5.
MORSE, EDWARD SYLVESTER
Edward Sylvester Morse as Expert and Western Observer
in Meiji Japan, pt. II. Jul'87, p.12.
Edward Sylvester Morse as Expert and Western Observer
in Meiji Japan, pt. I. May'87, p.16.
MOTION PICTURES
Imamura Shohei (Director). Nov.-Dec.’98 p.10
A Swashbuckler a la Tarantino. Sept.-Oct.’98 p.52
Baby Krishna in Japan. Jul.-Aug.’98 p.25
"The Life of Oharu". Sep.'97, p.15
Reel Japan: An Overview of Japanese Cinema. Sept.
'96 p.16
Ozu Yasujiro and the Chigasakikan. Sept. '96 p.22
Kamakura Cinema World: Japan's First Movie Fantasy
Land.
Sept. '96 p.28
Ran: The Quintessence of Kurosawa Aesthetics. Jul'85,
p.50.
American Mishima Made in Japan. Jul.'84, p.51
MOTOORI NORINAGA
Motoori Norinaga a Scholar-Physician Who Loved Cherry
Blossoms. May-Jun'90, p.18.
MOUNT FUJI see: FUJI-SAN
MOUNTAINS
Haunted Peaks: The Tanigawa Mountains. Jul-Aug'89, p.7.
The Mountain "Islands" of Chichibu. May-Jun'89,
p.30.
The Man who Saw Gods in Oze. Mar-Apr'89, p.32.
The Mountains of Tohoku. Jan-Feb'89
The Mountains of Tohoku. Nov-Dec'88, p.22.
MT. FUJI
Mt. Fuji as a Photogenic Subject. Sep.'81, p.33
MURAKAMI
Marine Warriors. Jul-Aug '93, p.9.
MURASAKI SHIKIBU
Murasaki Shikibu, The Author of a Picture Scroll Romance.
Aug.'88, p.24.
MUSEUMS
The Hakone Museum of Art. Nov'87, p.40.
The MOA Museum of Art. Sep'87, p.40.
Hakone, Atami and the Activities of MOA. Jul.'82, p.40
MUSIC see also: CONCERTS
Gagaku: Japan’s Imperial Court Music...Jul.-Aug.’98
p.19
The Boys in Shiva Blue. Jan.-Feb.’98 p.28
The Shakuhachi (Japanese flute). May '96 p.6
The Karaoke Box Vogue. Nov-Dec'89, p.41.
The Eerie Hand Drum. Nov-Dec'89, p.43.
The Japanese Sense of Sound and Rhythm. Jul-Aug'88,p.5.
Problem of Import and Export of Music in Japan. May'84,
p.65
The Theoretical Elements of Japanese Music, pt.III -
Music Forms. Jul/Aug'83, p.21
The Theoretical Elements of Japanese Music, pt.II - Rhythm
- Transitional Aspects of Music in Time. May ‘83 p.25
Theoretical Elements of Japanese Music pt.I. Jan.'83,
p.25
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS see also: DRUMS
The Shakuhachi (the Japanese flute). May '96 p.6
Koto Player Miyagi Kiyoko. Jul'86, p.36.
MUTO SANJI
Muto Sanji - A Businessman Who Fought Against Social
Injustice. Jan'87, p.13.
MYOE
The Priest Myoe - A Man Who Lived in this World and the
Unconscious World. Sep-Oct'90, p.48.
NAGAI KAFU
“Low Clogs” (short story). Sept.-Oct.’98 p.43
In Search of Kafu’s Tokyo. Sept.-Oct.’98 p.36
NAGANO
Nagano People. Nov.'97, p.7 (Please note
the Nov. 1997 issue has many articles dealing with aspects of Nagano)
Sakuma Shozan. Nov.'97, p.8
A Cup of Tea for Issa. Nov.'97, p.15
The Storied Kiso Road (Kiso area). Nov.'97, p.21
Chikuma River Sketchbooks. Nov.'97, p.27
The Koumi Line. Nov.'97, p.35
Nagano Sketch Map (and statistics). Nov.'97, p.40
Matsumoto. Nov.'97, p.44
Azumino. Nov.'97, p.47
God's Country. Nov.'97, p.49
The Community Atop the Mountain of the Gods. Nov.'97,
p.53
Bathing with the Monkeys at Jigokudani. Mar. '96
p.12
NAGANO (con’t.)
A Stroll Through History, Literature and Nature.
Sept. '96 p.6
NAGASAKI see also: Isahaya Bay
Nagasaki: Secret Christians, Atomic Bomb and Fish Dishes.
Sep/Oct '83, p.21
NARA
The Wandering Capital of Nara. May '97, p.6
The Disembodied Yakushi Nyorai of Kofuku-ji Temple.
Nov-Dec '91, p.18.
NARCISSUS
The Narcissus. Jan-Feb '94, p.28.
NATIONAL CHARACTERISTICS - JAPAN
This Article’s Unique. Mar-Apr.’98 p.54
NEWSPAPERS
Kairakutei Black. Nov. '96 p.41
NEZU SHRINE
Nezu Shrine. Feb.'84, p.36
NIJO CASTLE
The Structure of the Aesthetic Sense of the Tokugawa
Samurai. Nov.'84, p.53
NIKKO EDO-MURA
Nikko Edo-Mura: To the Edo Period by Train.
May '96 p.56
NINJATSU
Ninja Hattori Hanzo. Mar-Apr '91, p.28.
NITOBE, MARY E. (MRS. INAZO NITOBE)
Ethel Fairmont Snyder, Mary Elkinton Nitobe and the Founding
of the Japan Humane Society. Jan.'97, p.13
NOGI MARESUKE
The Tragedy of General Nogi. Mar-Apr'89, p.11.
NOGUCHI HIDEYO
Noguchi Hideyo. Nov-Dec'89, p.20.
NOH
Zeami's Theory of Noh Art. Dec.'84, p.8
An Early Summer Night's Dream - Takigi - Noh at Kofukuji
Temple. Jan.'84, p.36
NOH (con’t.)
Sympathy for the Underdog as Found in Noh. Nov.'82, p.53
NOJIRI
The Community Atop the Mountain of the Gods. Nov.'97,
p.53
NOREN
The Noren: The Reputation Curtain. Sept.
'96 p.14
NOVELIST see AUTHORS
NYORAI
Nyorai and Bosatsu. Jan'88, p.21.
OE KENZABURO
The Novelist in Today's World. May-Jun'90, p.54.
OGASAWARA ISLANDS
The Ogasawara Islands: Where the Japanese Speak English.
May'88, p.30.
OITA
Oita: The Land of Riddles. Dec.'83, p.24
OKAYAMA
Okayama, Birthplace of Talented People. May'81, p.21
OKINAWA
How has Okinawa Changed? Mar.'97, p.6
Okinawa - A Paradise Playground with a Dark Past.
Nov-Dec '92, p.25.
The Bright and Dark Sides of Okinawa. Oct.'84, p.24
OKINOTORISHIMA
Southernmost Japanese Island Nearly Submerges Beneath
the Pacific. Aug'88, p.31.
OKONOMIYAKI
Okonomiyaki. Sep-Oct'90, p.46.
OKUTAMA
Okutama. Sept.-Oct.’98 p.28
OLYMPIC GAMES
The Legacy of Nagano. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.4
OMAMORI
Lucky Charms. Nov-Dec '93, p.25.
OMURA HIKOEMON
Hikoemon's Crying-At-Night Pillar. Nov-Dec'86, p.9.
ONSEN
Winter in Ishikawa's Onsen-Machi. Jan.'97, p.57
O-NIGIRI
O-nigiri, The Instant Rice Dish. May-Jun'89, p.26.
OPERA
Miura Tamaki, Prima Donna of Japan. Nov-Dec'90, p.22.
OZU, YASUJIRO
Ozu Yasujiro and the Chigasakikan. Sept. '96 p.22
PARTITIONS see: TATEGU NOREN
PEARLS
Tasaki Shinju. May-Jun.’98 p.50
Living Jewels. May '96 p.25
PHYSICALLY HANDICAPPED
Hanawa Hokuchi: A Great Scholar Who Overcame Blindness.
Nov-Dec '93, p.40.
PICTURE SCROLL
The Yamanaka Tokiwa Scroll. Jul-Aug'90, p.32.
Edo Fuzaku Emaki, A Picture Scroll by Genre-Art Pioneer
Hishikawa Moronobu. Nov-Dec'89, p.36.
Fragment of the Illustrated Sutra of Past Causes and
Present Effects. Jan-Feb'89, p.36.
Portrait of Taira no Kanemori, An Immortal Poet.
Jan'88, p.40.
Vulgarity and Bewitching Beauty. Jul'86, p.40.
PIRATES
Marine Warriors. Jul-Aug '93, p.9.
POETRY
The Peaks and Valleys of a Life and Mind: Miyazawa
Kenji... Jul. '96 p.13
The World of the Man Yoshu. Mar-Apr p.44.
Current - Affair Senryu. Jan-Feb'89, p.16.
Modern Senryu. Nov-Dec'88, p.10.
Old Senryu as a Mirror of Edoites. Sep-Oct'88, p.46.
The Origin of "Old Senryu". Aug.'88, p.21.
The World of Senryu. May'88, p.42.
POETS
The Peaks and Valleys of a Life and Mind: Miyazawa
Kenji's Search for Truth. Jul. '96 p.13
Kakinonaoto no Hitomaru Master of Elegy. May-Jun'89,
p.21.
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Fractions, The Bone of Postwar Japanese Politics. Nov.'87,
p.46.
The Tenno System. Mar'85, p.53.
Japanese Elections at a Turning Point. Aug/Sep'83, p.18
POLITICS
Politics as Theater: Voters Demanding Greater Stimulus
in the Political Arena. Jul/Aug'95, p.38
PORCELAIN
Rikyu and Raku Ware. Jul-Aug '92, p.33.
Ko-Kutani Ware. May-Jun '91, p.32.
The Meditative Spirit as Expressed in Kenzan's Picture
Plates. Jan-Feb'90, p.36.
Old Kutani Porcelain. Nov'85, p.40.
The World of the Chic Aka-e. Jun'85, p.40.
POSTURE
The Japanese Peculiar Way of Sitting. Jan-Feb'89, p.5.
POTTERY
Who Can Forget the Story of the Korean Potters Who Settled
in Naeshirogawa. Sep-Oct'89, p.26.
The Dawn of Japanese Culture. Jul-Aug'89, p.29.
Ninsei's Pair of Tea. Sep-Oct'88, p.36.
The Hakone Museum of Art. Nov'87, p.40.
PRIVATE HOUSES see: MINKA
PROSTITUTION
The Pleasure Quarters of Yoshiwara. Nov-Dec '91,
p.13.
PROVERBS
Ningen Banji Saio ga Uma. Nov. '96 p.27
Yaocho and Makeru ga Kachi - Intentional Losers and Wise
Losers. Sep'87, p.19.
PUBLIC BUILDINGS
Relocation of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Office.
Jan-Feb '91, p.62.
PUNISHMENT
Exile in Ancient Times. Sep-Oct'89, p.17.
Q - There are no entries for Q
RAILROADS
The Koumi Line (2 car train in Nagano). Nov.'97,
p.35
System
RAILROADS
The Koumi Line (2 car train in Nagano). Nov.'97,
p.35
Using Personal Computers Helps Rail Passengers in Greater
Tokyo. May'88, p.12.
Privatization of the Japanese National Railways. Jul'87,
p.18.
RELIGION
The Road of the Pilgrimage to Eighty-Eight Temples.
Jan-Feb '91, p.52.
The History of Japan's Early Christians. Nov-Dec'90,
p.16.
The History of Japan's Early Christians, pt.II.
Sep-Oct'90, p.7.
The History of Japan's Early Christians, pt.I. Jul-Aug'90,
p.7.
The Two Flowers of Japanese Zen. Jul/Aug'90, p.46.
World of Engi in Buddhism. Sep'86, p.14.
Religion in Contemporary Japanese Society. May'86,
p.10.
The Roots of Religion in Japan. Jan'86, p.10.
Shinto and Buddhism in Japanese Culture. Nov'87, p.13.
Taoist Priests Keep Alive the Ancient Beliefs. Nov.'84,
p.9
The Mysteries of the Ancient Japanese Religions. Nov.'84,
p.11
The "Living Buddhas" of Japan. Oct.'84, p.21
The Origin and Essence of Shinto Festivals. Sep.'84,
p.9
The Origin of the Shrine. Jul.'84, p.40
The Twelve-Linked Chain of Dependent Origination. May'84,
p.54
The Four Great Vows of Bodhisattva-Hood. Jan.'82, p.17
The Blood Relation and the Territorial Relation in the
Ancient Period. Mar.'82, p.62
Saicho and the Birth of Japanese Buddhism. Aug/Sep'83,
p.9
Buddhism and the Japanese. Jan.'83, p.6
A Samurai and Christianity. Nov.81, p.53
RENNYO
Rennyo: A Holy Man With A Worldly Mind. Nov.-Dec.’98
p.42
RESTAURANTS, BARS, ETC. see also: COFFEE
HOUSES
Life Beyond Roppongi (in Ebisu). Mar.-Apr.’98 p.34
Little Farmhouse in the City. Jul.’96 p.53
Tokyo Kissaten. Jan. '96 p.6
RICE
The Japanese and Rice. Mar-Apr '91, p.48.
RICKSHAW see: JINRIKISHA
RINPA SCHOOL
Sotatsu and Korin - Two Flowers of Japanese Painting.
Sep-Oct '92, p.31.
ROME
An Audrey Hepburn Holiday. May-Jun.’98 p.55
ROSANJIN
Kitaoji Rosanjin - The Artist of Many Colors. Jul-Sep
'93, p.40.
RYOKAN see: HOTELS, MOTELS, ETC.
RYOMA SAKAMOTO
Sakamoto Ryoma - Swordsman, Seaman, Pioneer, Paragon.
Jan/Feb'95, p.18
RYUKYU ISLANDS
The Yaeyama Archipelago: Islands Beyond the Stream.
May-Jun.’98 p.30
A B
C
D E
F
G
H I J
K
L M
N
O P
Q
R S
T
U V
W
X Y
Z
SADO
Sado: Gilded Island of Elegant Exiles. May'86, p.21.
Sado: Gilded Island of Elegant Exiles. Mar'86, p.33.
SAGA PREFECTURE
Saga: Analects of Bushido, Pottery Par Excellence.
Jul/Aug'83, p.26
SAILORS
A Captain's Log pt.V. Jan'88, p.62.
A Captain's Log pt.IV. Nov'87, p.63.
A Captain's Log pt.III. Sep'87, p.64.
A Captain's Log pt. II. Jul'87, p.61.
A Captain's Log pt. I. May'81, p.56.
SAKAI GOITSU
Snow, Moon, and Flower by Horitsu. Sep'86, p.40.
SAKE see: BEVERAGES
SAKUMA, SHOZAN
Sakuma, Shozan (from Shinano). Nov.'97, p.8
SAMURAI
Buke no kakun (the way of the warrior). Jan. '96
p.34
Buke no kakun (the way of the warrior). Mar. '96
p.34
Buke no kakun (the way of the warrior). May '96
p.43
The Way of the Warrior - Buke no Kakun, Pt. II. Sep/Oct'95,
p.56
The Way of the Warrior - Buke no Kakun, Pt. III. Nov/Dec'95,
p.34
Budo Shoshinshu, pt.1. Mar/Apr'94, p.48
Budo Shoshinshu, pt.2. Jul/Aug'94, p.45
Budo Shoshinshu, pt.3, Sep/Oct'94, p.45
Budo Shoshinshu, pt.4, Nov/Dec'94, p.43
Budo Shoshinshu, pt.5, Jan/Feb'95, p.46
Budo Shoshinshu, pt.6, Mar/Apr'95, p.44
Budo Shoshinshu, pt.7, May/Jun'95, p.50
Buke no Kakun. Jul/Aug'95, p.22
Takeda Shingen. Nov-Dec '91, p.48.
The Facts Behind Kataki-uchi. May-Jun '91, p.55.
Samurai in Love, Samurai Out of Work. May-Jun'90, p.7.
The Way of the Warrior in an Age of Peace. Mar-Apr'90,
p.14.
The Vendetta on Joruri Hill Road. Jan-Feb'90, p.11.
The Onin Disturbance. Jul'86, p.8.
Samurai Diplomats in Edo. Mar'86, p.21.
Seppuku: Testimony to the Samurai Spirit. Dec.'83, p.10
The Joei Code, The First Written Code of Warriors. Dec.'83,
p.14
The Uprising at Hamaguri Gomon Gate. Jul.'83, p.11
The Samurai and Christianity. Nov.'81, p.53
SANTOKA TANEDA
Walking Toward the Clouds - Sculpted High - The Life
of Haiku Poet Taneda Santoka. Sep/Oct'95, p.17
SCHOOL DISCIPLINE
The Peculiar Dress Codes of Japanese Schools. Nov-Dec'88,
p.48.
SCHOOLS see also: INTERNATIONAL SCHOOLS
SCIENCE
Postwar Returns: A Survey of Japanese Science Over
the Past Fifty Years. Jul. '96 p.38
Dr. Imanishi's Theory of Evolution. Feb.'84, p.10
The Men Who Confined an Atomic Bomb in a Microwave Oven.
Sep/Oct'83, p.38
A One Passenger Car for the Physically Handicapped. May'82,
p.10
Canned Sun. May'81, p.33
Electric Power Generation Projects. Mar.'81, p.27
Two Unusual Substitutes for Oil. Jan.'81, p.19
The Advent of the Miniature Liquid - Crystal Television.
Jan.'81, p.19
Can a Toxin Cure Leukemia. Jan'81, p.20
Three New Developments in Cancer Research. Jan.'81, p.51
White Blood (artificial). Nov.'80, p.57
Harnessing Waves and Winds for Electric Generation pt.
II. Mar'80, p.44
Harnessing Waves and Winds for Electric Generation pt.I.
Jan.'80 p.14
100-Story Skyscraper in an Earthquake-Prone Country.
Jan.'80, p.14
A Water Robot. Jan.'80, p.14
Synthesis of Transfer Ribonucleic Acid. Jan.'80, p.14
Research for Substitute Energy for Oil. Jan.'80, p.14
SCIENTISTS
Two Men at the Van of Japanese Science.
A Fallen Padre's Contribution to Scientific Thought in
Japan. Sep'87, p.53.
SEA FOOD
Konbu and Dried Bonito, Two Materials for Japanese Stock.
Nov-Dec'90, p.46.
How to Enjoy Sushi. Sep'87, p.28.
SEI SHONAGON
Sei Shonagon. Sep-Oct'88, p.12.
SENKAKU ISLANDS
The Senkakus: Small, Uninhabited, Controversial.
Jan.'97, p.21
SENRYU see: POETRY
SHIGA
Shiga - Ancient Battlefields, Places Sacred to Buddha,
and Merchants in a Lake Province. Jan.'80 p.21
SHIKOKU
The Road of the Pilgrimage to Eighty-Eight Temples.
Jan-Feb '91, p.52.
SHIMANE
Shimane: Mythology, A Silver Rush and Tragic Islands
of Imprisonment. Jan.'82, p.21
SHIMAZAKI, MIKIO
The Happy Life of Shimazaki, Mikio. May '97, p.29
SHINJUKU
Nishi Shinjuku. Jan.-Feb.’98 p.30
SHINRAN
Shinran: Buddhist Medium and Heir to Honen.
Mar.’97 p.25
SHINTOISM
Shinto and Buddhism in Japanese Culture. Nov'87, p.13.
The Roots of Religion in Japan. Jan'86, p.10.
The Origin and Essence of Shinto Festivals. Sep.'84,
p.9
The Origin of the Shrine. Jul.'84, p.40
The Shinto Deities. Sep.'82, p.60
SHIPS
The Red-Seal Ship of Merchant-Soldier Chaya Shirojiro.
Nov-Dec'90, p.30.
SHORT STORIES
“Low Clogs”. Sept.-Oct.’98 p.43
“Scenes at an Airport”. Jul.-Aug.’98 p.48
“The Peacocks”. May-Jun.’98 p.8
“Shades” by Alex Shishin. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.25
“The Window”. Jan.-Feb.’98 p.44
SHOTOKU TAISHI
Shotoku Taishi: Japan's Buddhist Role Model and
Midwife of Wa. Sept. '96 p.51
SHOYU see: SOY
SHRINES see also: SHINTOISM
The Heart Remembers Izumo. Jan.'97, p.6
Nezu Shrine. Feb.'84, p.36
"Hatsumode" at Meiji Shrine. Jan.'81, p.34
SILK ROAD
Lady Under a Tree. Nov-Dec '91, p.33.
SINGERS
Miura Tamaki, Prima Donna of Japan. Nov-Dec'90, p.22.
SKIING
Marunuma Kogen: An Urbanite's Refuge. Sept. '96
p.43
SMOKING see: TOBACCO HABIT
SOBA
Searching for Sarashina Soba. Nov.'97, p.64
SOCCER
Successful Debut for the J. League. Jan-Feb '4,
p.23.
SOCIAL CLASSES
What was the Bushi Class? Dec.'84, p.14
SOCIAL LIFE AND CUSTOMS
Yatai Refuges for Salaried Workers. Jan/Feb'95, p.31
"En" the Starting Point of Groupism. Feb.'84, p.60
The Study of Japanese Society - Figments of Whose
Imagination. Aug/Sep'83, p.62
The War for Employment. Mar.'82, p.7
The Way of Japanese Chonin. Mar.'81, p.45
Japanese Companies. Nov.'80, p.6
Ikki: The Frequent Stuggles of Japanese Farmers. Nov.'79,
p.39
SOTATSU, TAWARAYA
Sotatsu and Korin - Two Flowers of Japanese Painting.
Sep-Oct '92, p.31.
SOY
Soy Sauce - An International Seasoning. Jul/Aug'95, p.56
Soy Sauce Goes West. Jul/Aug'94, p.50
The Mysteries of Shoyu. May-Jun'90, p.24.
STARFFIN, VICTOR
Sorrowful Ace Without a Motherland. May-Jun'89,
p.7.
SUBMERGED LANDS
The Guillotine Falls on the Isahaya Tideland. Jul.'97,
p.6
SUGIHARA, CHUINE
Sugihara Chiune, a Japanese Who Saved Six Thousand Jews.
Jul/Aug'94, p.15
SUICIDE
Japanese Suicide. Sep'85, p.46.
SUIGIN see: PIRATES
SUMITOMO
The History of the House of Sumitomo. Mar-Apr'90, p.40.
SUMMER
Summers Past Become Present. Sept. '96 p.30
SUMO
Gunbai (the referee's fan). Jan. '96 p.29
Placing the Rules of Sumo Above Oneself - Takanohana
Becomes the 65th Yokozuna. JAn/Feb'95, p.55
Brawn vs. Corpulence. Jul'87, p.26.
SUSHI
Sushi. Jan-Feb'92, p.33.
How to Enjoy Sushi. Sep'87, p.28.
SUWA
Suwa: Home of an Ancient Shrine Complex.
Nov.'97, p.57
SUZUKI, KANTARO
The Japanese Prime Minister at the End of the Pacific
War. Aug.-Sep.’83 p.13
SWORDS see: ARMS AND ARMOR
A B
C
D E
F
G
H I J
K
L M
N
O P
Q
R S
T
U V
W
X Y
Z
TADA KIYOSHI
The Echiyen Daibutsu. Nov-Dec'88, p.28.
TAIJI
A Sad Song From the Whalers of Taiji. Jan-Feb '93,
p.25.
TAKADA CASTLE
The Echigo Disturbance. Jan-Feb '94, p.7.
TAKAGARI see: FALCONRY
TAKAYAMA
The Taste of Takayama. Sept.-Oct.’98 p.5
Takayama: City of Markets, Temples, Sake Brewers
and Traditional Streetscapes. Jul.-Aug.’98 p.5
The Takayama Festival. May-Jun.’98 p.37
The Splendors of Takayama. Sep.'97, p.6
TANABATA
Tanabata: Starry-Eyes about Edo. Jul. '96
p.51
TANEGASHIMA
Tanegashima, Isle of the Arquebus, Isle of the Rocket.
May'87, p.30.
TANIGAWA MOUNTAINS
Haunted Peaks: The Tanigawa Mountains. Jul-Aug'89, p.7.
TANUMA OKITSUGU
Nineteen Years That Shook the Shogunate. Mar-Apr
'92, p.51.
TAOISM
Taoist Priests Keep Alive the Ancient Beliefs. Nov.'84,
p.9
The Mysteries of the Ancient Japanese Religions. Nov.'84,
p.11
TASAKI SHINJU
Tasaki Shinju (pearl industry). May-Jun.’98 p.50
TATEGU
The Beauty of Japanese Architecture Tradition & Creation.
Jul-Aug '93, p.25.
TATOOING
The History of Japanese Tatooing. Sep-Oct'90, p.42.
TAXICAB DRIVERS
A Shift in the Day of a Female Taxi Driver. Jul.-Aug.’98
p.40
TEA CEREMONY
The Tea Caddy. Nov-Dec '93, p.30.
Tasting the Blessings of Nature. May-Jun '93, p.36.
Ido Tea Bowls. May-Jun '93, p.32.
Rikyu and Raku Ware. Jul-Aug '92, p.32.
Ninsei's Pair of Teabowls. Sep-Oct'88, p.36.
Why is Chanoyu so Ceremonial? Nov.'83, p.54
TECHNOLOGY
Virtual Reality. Nov.-Dec.’98 p.54
The Plasma Display (the way we see images). Sept.-Oct.’98
p.50
The Hidden Story of the Development of the Optical Fiber.
Sept.’84 p.16
The Computer - The Past, Present and Future. Nov.'81,
p.21
The robot boom. Jul.'81, p.5
TELEPHONE
The Personal Handiphone. Sept. '96 p.36
TEMPLES
Choshichi Tataki (Restoration work in Angkor Thom, Cambodia)
Nov.-Dec.’98 p.33
Masterpieces of Horyu-ji Temple. Sep'86, p.8.
TENJIN-SAMA
A God for All Seasons. Nov-Dec '92, p.8.
TEXTILE INDUSTRY
Spinning Thread Out of Forest. Jan-Feb '91, p.22.
Edo-Ko-Mon Dyer Komiya Yasutaka. May'86, p.37.
Yinzen - Dyeing - Ideal Beauty. Jul'85, p.32.
TEXTILES
The Warp and Woof of the Tatsumuras. (restoring premodern
textiles). May '97, p.36
THEATER
The Flower of Edo Popular Culture. Jan'86, p.21.
Zeami's Theory of Noh Art. Dec.'84, p.8
An Early Summer Night's Dream - Takigi- Noh at Kofuku-ji
Temple. Jan.'84, p.36
TIDELAND see: SUBMERGED LANDS
TILES
Kawara: Rooftops of Japanese Towns. May '96
p.35
TOBACCO HABIT
Butt Receptacles as Ash-Can Art. May-Jun.’98 p.48
The Sun is Starting to Set on Smokers’ Paradise. May-Jun.’98
p.42
TOFU
The History of Tofu. Jul-Aug'90, p.25.
TOKAGEN
Ogawa Usen - A Painter of Enchanted Lands. Jan-Feb
'94, p.30.
TOKUGAWA
The Structure of the Aesthetic Sense of the Tokugawa
Samurai. Nov.'84, p.53
Nineteen Years that Shook the Shogunate. Mar-Apr
'92, p.51.
The Way of the Warrior in an Age of Peace. Mar-Apr'90,
p.14.
The Vendetta on Joruri Hill Road. Jan-Feb'90, p.11.
Edo Castle and the Shogun's Lifestyle. Sep-Oct'89, p.46.
City of the Shogun - How Ieyasu Built His Capital.
May-Jun'89, p.16.
TOKUGAWA (con’t.)
City of the Shogun - How Ieyasu Built His Own Capital.
May- Jun'89, p.16.
TOKYO
In Search of Kufu’s Tokyo. Sept.-Oct.’98 p.36
A Shift in the Day of a Female Taxi Driver. Jul.-Aug.’98
p.40
Unplanned Edo, the Jumble of Tokyo. May-Jun.’98
p.16
Yanaka. Mar.-Apr.’98 p.30
The Yagiri Ferry. Nov.’96 p.34
Tsukuda-jima. Nov. '96 p.32
The Birth of Grand Edo with 808 Quarters. Jul'85, p.21.
The Sumida River. May'81, p.34
Tokyo Port. Mar.'81, p.35
Hatsumode at Meiji Shrine. Jan.'81, p.34
Underground Shinjuku. Nov.'81, p.34
Akihabara - Appliances at Black Market Prices. May '80,
p.41
Nihonbashi: Bridge & Vicinity. May'80, p.5
The Unsung Station. Mar.'80 p.42
The View from the East Garden. Jan.'80, p.35
TOKYO GAS
Tokyo Gas’s Environmental Conservation Activities.
Jul.-Aug.’98 p.46
TOKYO - HISTORY - 1868-1945
City of Gaiety, City of Foreboding. Mar'87, p.48.
Tokyo in Meiji Era. Jan'87, p.5.
TOMITARO
Makino Tomitaro - The Green Thumb of Japanese Botanists.
Sep-Oct '93, p.39.
TOOLS
Carpenters' Tools and Japanese Architecture. May'88,
p.59.
TORA-SAN see: ATSUMI, KIYOSHI
TOYOTOMI HIDEYOSHI
Selected Letters of Toyotomi Hideyoshi. Jul'86, p.62.
TRADE
Japan Exports. Sep.'80, p.20
Traditional Technology. Aug.'83, p.20
TRANSLATING AND INTERPRETING
On Translation of Modern Japanese Literature. Mar.'97,
p.38
TSUDA UMEKO
Tsuda Umeko - Pioneer Educator of Japanese Women.
Jul-Aug '91, p.7.
TRADE ROUTES
The Red-Seal Ship of Merchant-Soldier Chaya Shirojiro.
Nov-Dec'90, p.30.
TRAVELERS
Processions and Pilgrimages on the Road in Tokugawa Japan.
Mar'87, p.15.
TSUKUBA SCIENCE CITY
Tsukuba Science City. Feb'85, p.27.
TSUKUDA-JIMA
Tsukuda-Jima: Quarter Where Time Stands Still.
Mar'87, p.12.
TSUSHIMA
Tsushima: Isles at the Border. Jan'87, p.45.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
UEMURA, NAOMI
Mr. Uemura's Last Adventure. May '84, p.9
UEMURA, SHOEN
Uemura Shoen - A Woman Artist Devoted to Painting Beauties.
Jan-Feb '91, p.28.
UESUGI, YOZAN
Uesugi Yozan: An Enlightened Daimyo in Northern Japan.
May '85, p.9.
UKIYO-E see: WOODBLOCK PRINTS
UTOPIA
Ogawa Usen: A Painter of Enchanted Lands. Jan-Feb
'94, p.30.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
VILLAGE LIFE see: COUNTRY LIFE
VOLCANOES
The Japanese Archipelago. Aug.'88, p.32.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z WAKAYAMA
Wakayama: A Passionate and Progressive Spirit Fostered by a Warm Climate. Jul.'80, p.21WATER
How Studying Abroad Led to a Project to Convert Water to
Fuel. Jan. '96 p.45WHALING
A Sad Song from the Whalers of Taiji. Jan-Feb'93, p.25.WINDOWS
Japanese Windows. Sep-Oct '93, p.30.WOMEN
The Japanese Conception of a Beautiful Woman (how the eye
has changed over centuries). May-Jun.’98 p.25WOMEN AUTHORS
The Sanukinosuke Nikki. May-Jun'89, p.48.
The Kagero Nikki: The Diary of Michituna's Mother. Jan-Feb'89, p.54.
Sei Shonagon. Sep-Oct'88, p.12.
Murasaki Shikibu, The Author of a Picture-Scroll Romance. Jul-Aug'88, p.24.WOMEN - EDUCATION
Tsuda Umeko - Pioneer Educator of Japanese Women. Jul-Aug '91, p.7.WOMEN - HISTORICAL
Geisha Sadayakko. Jul.'80, p.5WOMEN - POLITICAL ACTIVITY
Feminist Kamichika Ichiko. Jul-Aug'89, p.17.WOMEN - SOCIAL CONDITIONS
The Pleasure Quarters of Yoshiwara. Nov- Dec '91, p.13.
The Crimes and Punishment of Women. May'82, p.6
Japanese Women and Cosmetics. Jul.'81, p.16
Geisha Sadayakko - The Story of a Japanese Woman Who Lived in the Meiji Era. Jul.'80, p.5WOMEN IN LITERATURE AND ART
Onna San no Muja. Sep-Oct '91, p.38.
Uemura Shoen: A woman Artist Devoted to Painting Beauties. Jan-Feb'91, p.28.
A Dream-Seeking Life - The Life of Sugawara - no - Takasue's Daughter, The Author of the Sarashina Nikki. Sep-Oct'89, p.62.WOODBLOCK
Katsuhira Tokushi. Jan'87, p.39.
Young Artists Captivated By Woodblock Painting. May'86, p.50.WOODBLOCK PRINTS
Prints of Light and Shadow: The Art of Kobayashi Kiyochika.
Jan. '96 p.57
Snow Falling From the Past onto Paper: The Art of Iwasaki
Kisaku. Nov. '96 p.28
Genre-Painting: Evoking the Charm and Cheer of the
Commoners. Nov-Dec. '92 p.31
Hiroshige, Ukiyo-e, and the Japanese Spirit. May '92 p.32
Ukiyo-e painter Katsushika Hokusai. Jul. '91 p.32
Ukiyo-e by Katsukawa Shunsho. Nov. '88 p.36
The Flowers of Edo Popular Culture. Jan. '86 p.21WORD PROCESSING
The Japanese Word Processor. Mar. '96 p. 25WORLD WAR II
The Japanese View of the Pacific war. Jul/Aug'95, p.42
Two Thorns in Russo-Japanese Relations: The Siberian Detention and the Northern Territories. May/Jun'95, p.44
Plight of the Hibakusha: A-Bomb Survivors Call for Compensation. Mar/Apr'95, p.54
Death Camps Atrocities Against Allied POWs. Jan/Feb'95, p.12
The Comfort Woman System - Enslaving Women in World War II. Sep/Oct'94, p.38
Japan's Forgotten Children. Nov/Dec'94, p.24WRIGHT, FRANK LLOYD
Frank Lloyd Wright and the Arts of Japan. Jan-Feb'90, p.46.A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z X - There are no entries for X
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z YAEYAMA ARCHIPELAGO
The Yaeyama Archipelago: Islands Beyond the Stream.
May-Jun.p.30YAKUSHIMA
Yakushima - Cedarn Isle Preserving the Footprints of a Missionary. Jul'87, p.43.YAM
The Story of Grated Yam Dishes. Jan-Feb'91, p.48.YAMASHITA, HIROFUMI
Goldman Laureate Yamashita Hirofumi. May-Jun.’98 p.4YOKOHAMA
Beer and the Dawn of Westernization. Sep-Oct'89, p.58.YOMEIRI
The Bartered Brides of the Edo Period. Jul-Aug '92, p.46.YOSHIMOTO, BANANA
"Blood and Water", A Short Story by Yoshimoto, Banana. Jul.'97, p.47YOSHITUNE
Yoshitune - The Underdog Who Became a National Legend. Jul-Aug '92, p.50.A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ZEN BUDDHISM
Dogen: Asserting Zazen was Buddhism Itself. May.'97, p.51