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  1. 2016年4月12日 · Moving to Japan to teach English is an exciting, but nerve-racking, prospect. People have been at this for a while, so fortunately there's a wealth of helpful information right at your fingertips: from where to buy groceries to how to manage unruly middle school students.

  2. 2018年1月23日 · Once the Tokugawa Clan successfully unified the country, they designated the area the Hachinohe Domain. With a large, thriving port that allowed access to the bounties of the sea just south of Hokkaido, Hachinohe was a commercial center of the region. During the Meiji Restoration (1868), the Hachinohe Domain was abolished, and it was merged ...

  3. 2017年8月11日 · write The Smart Guide to Teaching English in Japan. The book promises to show you how to make enough to live comfortably and save for the future while working in Japan—even if you don't know Japanese, and even if you're not necessarily a native The ...

  4. 7. Frankie Cihi. Painter Frankie Cihi, a half-Japanese half-American graduate of New York’s School of Visual Arts, made the move to Tokyo after finishing school, where she taught English before gracing the television screen—including her stint as a cast member of the 2014 hit reality show Terrace House.

  5. 2017年12月26日 · Here’s an abbreviated list of the objectives of the course: • Understand the basic tropes and methodologies of the magical girl genre. • Use the genre to introduce basic tenets of feminism. • Question whether niche interests like anime can elaborate on theoretical questions of aesthetics versus politics in a meaningful way.

  6. 2018年1月23日 · In the Spring of 1689, Matsuo Basho—the most famous poet in Japanese history—embarked on a bold and dangerous journey into Japan’s Oku, the wild and ungoverned deep north. Written in a combination of prose and haiku, Basho’s account of his journey, Oku no Hosomichi (The Narrow Road to the Deep North) became one of the major texts of ...

  7. 2017年12月21日 · pixta.jp. The Hakone Sekisho (箱根関所), or Hakone Checkpoint, was the first major checkpoint on the Tokaido (東海道) highway connecting Edo (now Tokyo) with Kyoto. Constructed in 1619 and used until 1869, it was one of 53 such checkpoints used by the Tokugawa government to control travel between cities during the Edo Period (1603-1868).