Archive for January, 2010

Life at KCP photo-reportage series

January 29, 2010

Part One | A Look at the Campus

KCP main building
The KCP main building, early morning sun, in a relatively sane part of Tokyo’s otherwise very busy Shinjuku district.


KCP, street level.  Students waiting for buses, hooking up with friends.


One of the classroom buildings. Note street sign in both kanji and romaji (romanized letters).


A typical KCP classroom.  It’s so peaceful, empty!  (For less peaceful classrooms, see below.)


Computer lab, almost empty.  These computers have flat screens, plenty of USB ports, internet access, CD drives, and software such as Word and Excel.


The KCP library, full of good reference materials to support your learning.


The student lounge, where students eat, drink, and chat. Onsite vending machines plus local stores nearby. Obento is a favorite. Bulletin board posts pics of recent school events and co-curricular activities.


Students enjoying learning games in language class.


Everyone is involved, even those not part of the discussion.  Classes are a mix of Americans and students from other Asian countries.


Small-group exercises.  For language, this is a great way to learn.  Real communication can happen in a small group.


And small-group work with a teacher to check in occasionally is even better. KCP teachers are known for their ability to both generate interest and respond to the needs of each individual.


What Students Say . . .

January 21, 2010

Catalina Tiamson, University of Washington
My experience in Japan wouldn’t be anything like how incredible it was without KCP. Through them, I now have a family overseas that I consider real family. I have friends all over the country who I regularly correspond with. I plan to go back next summer, definitely through KCP.

I am a junior. I took Japanese for a graduation requirement. After studying Japanese for a year, I began looking around for a study abroad experience and discovered KCP. I planned to study there only for the summer. But after living in Japan,  immersed in the language and culture, I was hooked! At KCP, I delved right into the heart of all things Japanese. I am now a double major in Japanese and American Ethnic Studies. After graduation, I’ll be teaching English in Japan while I complete my masters degree program in education.

The “New” Seven Samurai

January 12, 2010

This past weekend I saw the stunning film Seven Samurai (七人の侍 Shichinin no samurai–1954), digitally remastered in high-def.  At 3½ hours, it was much longer than conventional films, but I was riveted the whole time.  It played at my local independent movie house. (For those of you in Bellingham, it’s part of a Masters of Japanese Cinema program by the Pickford and Western Washington University.

Akira Kurosawa, the director, created the basic recruitment-of-heroes film that has been a model for so many–The Magnificent Seven and Ocean’s Eleven, among others.  Even more, this film was a major forerunner of the introduction of Asian sensibilities–zen, aesthetics, food, style–to the American public.

As Patrick Crogan of SensesOfCinema says, the movie itself was “an action film that engaged the emotions and the intellect in equal and extraordinary measures.”  I’m by no means a film expert.  But I was captivated by the water-wind-fire-mud motifs, the camera shots pitting sweeping, dynamic warrior scenes against quiet close-ups.  Everybody ran everywhere, in that village!  The strong winds blowing were intensely powerful.  It was also supremely satisfying to see some character development (or revelation) in an action movie–not easy to do.  The themes are undoubtedly tied in with the Japanese peoples’ search for identity, a clear moral code, and nationalism after World War II.  Toshiro Mifune (a major character in many of Kurosawi’s films) and Takashi Shimura star.

Toshiro Mifune


It’s impossible not to be engaged by this movie.  And I was not at all prepared for the enormous role humor played in the story.  If you’re looking for some good insight into what it means to be Japanese, this movie is a champion.  It ranks among the world’s best films of all time.

Check out–

Senses of cinema

wikipedia/Seven Samurai

Criterion Films

Masters of Japanese Cinema

diving deeper into wabi-sabi

January 7, 2010

I’ve just been reading a great book on wabi-sabi (the beauty of impermanence; the impermanence of beauty).  It’s called

Wabi-Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers

by Leonard Koren

Wabi Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers

Click here for Leonard Koren’s website.

The book is delightful.  I especially like “the wabi-sabi universe.”  It goes like this–

Metaphysically, things are either dissembling into, or evolving from, nothingness.

Spiritually, (1) truth comes from observing nature; (2) greatness exists in the inconspicuous and overlooked; and (3) out of ugliness can come beauty.

State of Mind is to accept the inevitable and appreciate cosmic order.

Moral precepts: (1) get rid of all that is unnecessary; (2) focus on the intrinsic; and (3) ignore material hierarchy.

Material qualities include: the suggestion of natural processes, irregularity, intimacy, lack of pretension, earthiness, murkiness, and simplicity.

This feels like the real deal to me–the kind of thing I always suspected but have never seen encouraged in our self-betraying society.  This book is so worth it.  Consider buying it if you strive for a life where the real things matter.