CULTURE
Muslim Burial in Japan: Government Surveys Cities as Tensions Rise
Plans for Muslim burial grounds in Japan face local resistance and racist threats as the country's Muslim population doubles.
Despite what some people will try to tell you, culture in Japan isn't a fixed and unchanging entity stretching back in an unbroken line to the Nara era. It shifts with housing costs, demographic change, and the quiet negotiations people make in their daily lives. These stories covers the full breadth of that living culture: the traditions that persist, the subcultures that surface, and the social habits that get renegotiated as circumstances change.
Our reporting goes beyond "weird Japan." We document the friction and the pain points. Why are Japanese workers getting so little sleep? Why our people cutting back on having friends? Why are young people refusing to bathe, for goodness sakes?! We draw primarily from Japanese-language reporting, surveys, and researchers, which means we're less likely to launder a press release as a cultural story.
You'll find several dominant threads here. Economic pressure is quietly reshaping social life: the cost of friendship, the appeal of stigmatized "accident properties" at a discount, and men in rural areas giving up careers to follow their partners - all tell a story about what Japanese people are willing to renegotiate when money gets tight.
Traditional forms are under slow strain: a once-beloved lawn sport losing its aging fanbase, a centuries-old festival holding on, a tea industry looking for new models. And a running argument about digital versus physical shows up repeatedly, whether in debates over AI-generated art or the unlikely comeback of the handmade magazine.
CULTURE
Plans for Muslim burial grounds in Japan face local resistance and racist threats as the country's Muslim population doubles.
CULTURE
Why more people in Japan are forsaking YouTube and TikTok videos and crafting their own magazines by hand.
CULTURE
Japan joins a worldwide trend of limiting your social network as the cost of having friends becomes prohibitive.
CULTURE
While such properties have long been stigmatized, attitudes may be changing as the cost of everything rises.
CULTURE
The library, reopened to fanfare in 2022, continues to bring in more visitors every year than people who live in the prefecture.
CULTURE
If you have one of these cards and don't want to lose the balance - and the card - then you have…
CULTURE
Japan gets less sleep than any other nation. But the country's workaholic Prime Minister doesn't seem to care.
CULTURE
Demons out, luck in! How the festival of Setsubun evolved into a tradition enjoyed by kids across Japan every year.