William Sposato is a Tokyo-based journalist who has been a contributor to Foreign Policy since 2015. He has been following Japan’s politics and economics for more than 20 years, working at Reuters and ...
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How Japan Rebuilt Itself After World War II
After World War II, Japan lay in ruins—its cities devastated, economy shattered, and society in turmoil. This video examines the remarkable transformation that followed, from U.S. occupation reforms ...
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This Is How Ordinary Life Looked Like in Japan After WWII
In 1949, Japan stood at a crossroads between devastation and recovery. The country was still reeling from the impact of World War II, while facing rapid political and cultural changes under U.S.
Geopolitically, Japan is repositioning itself amid escalating U.S.-China tensions. Alarmed by supply chain vulnerabilities revealed during the pandemic, Tokyo is pursuing a "China Plus One" strategy ...
Tsushima helped a rising Asian power consolidate its regional standing, set that power on the path to destruction in World War II, and fired anti-imperial passions the world over.
My family moved abroad for 3 years. I loved living in Japan and miss a lot of things now that we're back in the US.
Japanese cultural productions are tweaking the formula to grab the attention of a younger generation.
AT CHINA’S Victory Day parade on September 3, Xi Jinping delivered a warning — the world stands at a crossroads between peace and war, and to prevent a catastrophic conflict engulfing the world again, ...
The focus of remembrance was especially sharp in Hiroshima, where the city marked 80 years since the U.S. atomic bombing on August 6, 1945. The attack killed 140,000 people. Three days later, a second ...
Japan’s maiden FIFA World Cup was the 1998 tournament in France. The group stage draw put them together with Argentina, Croatia and Jamaica. Despite Masashi Nakayama scoring their first ever World Cup ...
Art history has struggled to address a contradictory artistic output that engaged with Japan’s modernization and occupation, a new book argues.
To prevent the statement from impacting the LDP race, Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has decided to release it just before his expected resignation early next month.
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