Your browser is not supported for this experience. We recommend using Chrome, Firefox, Edge, or Safari. Japan is a fascinating county, rich in culture, tradition, exotic beaches and boasting one of the most famous cuisines in the world. The Japanese are very welcoming, eager to please and well mannered.
Even more promising is that more than 70 per cent of people in their 20s in Japan approve of legal same-sex marriage according to the National Institute of Social Security and Population Studies. Between these socio-political strides, several upcoming international sporting events, and Japan generally being an awesome travel destination, now is the best time to travel to and explore around the country. Home to two international airports and the largest city in the world, no trip to Japan is complete without spending some time in Tokyo. The lesbian bars Goldfinger and Rainbow Burrito and gay clubs Dragon Men and Arty Farty are particularly welcoming to English-speaking international visitors.
Shinjuku 2 Chome is like a gay bar buffet. Located across two small city blocks in Tokyo, the special ward is said to have the highest concentration of gay bars in the world. But unlike the large, loud, and perpetually-sticky drinking house and dance clubs familiar to Americans or Europeans, the queer-friendly spaces in the district are small, intimate, and stylized or themed, each with a capacity fewer than a dozen heads. Each bar is run by a mama , typically both the owner and bartender, as well as the person who picks the theme of his micro-bar.
To browse Academia. Unlike gay districts in the West and Australia, which are home to the gay and lesbian community, Shinjuku Ni-chome in Tokyo, the center of gay and lesbian businesses in Japan, is not a place where most gay men and lesbians choose to live. This paper examines the perceptions of gay men and lesbians about Shinjuku Ni-chome to explain why they do not prefer to live in Shinjuku Ni-chome. Fieldwork included snowball sampling semi-structured interviews with gay men and lesbians and participation in the activity of "Ni-chome umisakura," which is responsible for garbage collection in Shinjuku Ni-chome.