The Biggest Traps of Talking About Japan

Writing for Tofugu, I try and read as much as I can about Japan. I want to keep on top of current events, learn more about Japan and, most importantly, hear different perspectives.

In all of the articles, essays, posts, and books I’ve read, I’ve noticed that there are a few traps that people regularly fall into when they talk about Japan. These few cliches have bothered me more and more over the years as it’s become increasingly apparent that they’re borderline harmful.

I don’t want to criticize others too much because Lord knows that I’ve done some pretty crap writing, but I really want to acknowledges these cliches so that we might get past them.

“Weird Japan”

A lot of people talk about Japan as “weird Japan,” a place where all the people are strange and do wacky things and nothing makes sense. I wrote about the dangers of focusing too much on “weird Japan” last year, but a few things have happened recently that make me want to bring it up again.

Last year, one of the more reported-on stories about Japan was about a small group of people in Tokyo. These people took body modification to the extreme by injecting saline into their foreheads to make what essentially looked like a giant bagel on their face.

It’s definitely a weird and interesting phenomenon, but the way that most outlets reported on this was sadly predictable and really disappointing.

bagel-head-japan

It’s a new trend! Everybody’s doing it!

There were maybe a handful of people doing this in Japan, but lots of Western media outlets were quick to declare these “bagel heads” a “trend” in Japan, as if everybody and their grandma were sticking needles into their foreheads and letting the saline flow. Those kooky Japanese people!

More recently, Kotaku wrote about a hair salon in Osaka that created a hairdo that looks like a tomato. The author stresses that this hairdo is “not mainstream” and it’s hard to imagine that more than a few people in Japan have this haircut.

tomato-fashion

As if on cue people have begun declaring this one-off hairdo as “Japan’s Newest Hairstyle Craze.” What a weird country! People style their hair to look like a tomato!

There are certainly weird things that happen in Japan, but taking individual occurrences and pretending that they’re some kind of new, national craze is really disingenuous.

Instead, focus on the larger societal and cultural differences that actually set Japan apart from the rest of the world. As one Tofugu commenter so eloquently said:

After a while, it’s not weird [in Japan] in the obvious ways. It’s actually way weirder than that.

Going to Extremes

As you start to get interested in Japan, you’ll start to meet people who are really excited about the country. Isn’t Japanese food great? Aren’t Japanese toilets cool? Japanese culture is the best. I want to move to Japan!

On the flipside, there are plenty of people who love to gripe about Japan. As somebody who has trouble writing a lot (my essays for school were always under the minimum word count), I’m still blown away that Kotaku ran a 15,000 word rant about what sucks about Japan.

Neither perspective paints a complete picture.

comedy-tragedy

Sure, there’s a lot to like about Japan, but there’s plenty that should cause concern, too. For me, things like Japan’s its flawed legal system, and its high suicide rate make me see Japan in a different light.

Raging against Japan isn’t helpful, either. For the most part, the bad things Japan have some sort of twisted logic behind them that fits them into a bigger context. It isn’t always something you have to like or agree with, but understand why the bad things are bad is incredibly helpful to seeing the bigger situation.

I think there’s a lot of value in a more nuanced approach. It’s not always exciting as going to the extremes and won’t elicit as strong of an reaction from people; but I think that through moderation, you’re a lot more accurate and learn more.


I won’t pretend like I know the One True Way to Talk About Japan, and I hope that people call me when my writing isn’t accurate or is misleading. But I think that these are things that really plague the dialogue about Japan and, once we get past these tired tropes and cliches, we can learn a lot more.

Bonus! Our wonderful illustrator Aya has whipped up a high-res wallpaper version of her illustration for this post, which you can find here.

  • Brad Garrett

    Great post! I find this true when I talk to others about Japan myself. It’s hard not to talk about just the “weird stuff” or the “extremem stuff”.

    Also:
    “I don’t want to criticize others too much because Lord knows that I’ve done some pretty crap writing”

    Not sure if literary genius, or just a mistake.

  • Brad Garrett

    And of course, I have to have a typo as well, I suppose :P

  • Lily Queen

    I like the article but it definite needs another round of proofreading. :)

    “As you start to get interested in Japan, you’ll start to meet people who are really excited the country.”

    “On the flipside, there are plenty of people who love to grip about Japan.”

  • anon1312

    Common question after returning from Tokyo: “Did you get a schoolgirl panty from one of those panty vending machines they have everywhere?”

  • MisterM2402

    I liked your comment on proofreading, but it definiteLY needs another round of proofreading ;)

  • TomoeGozen

    Agreed! I think that site wtfjapanseriously.com has made everyone confused. Well they’ve made themselves confused, because all you’d have to do is look into any of these images to see how they are totally random and in no way define what happens in Japan. I mean what if Japan just showed clips of that show Fear Factor where they eat testicles and stuff? Then wtfamericaseriously.com could happen. Maybe it should. I talked about it here. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vm2drEJsy9Y

  • http://twitter.com/lostinseoul Vivian Morelli

    Well done!!! Great round-up.

  • ijiwaru

    Good work!
    Generally good advice for talking about any culture, I think.

    Or maybe even when talking about… anything (almost.)

  • http://MichaelLinkJr.deviantart.com/ Sakurafire

    I’ve seen plenty of shows, Japanese, Korean, and American, that always have someone going to Japan and doing or eating some weird stuff. I wonder if other countries have that about the US? “Hey there, check out this WEIRD thing EVERYONE in the US does! We’re throwing a baby in a rattlesnake pit! How wacky!” Of course, it almost sounds like a North Korean propaganda ad.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1550596562 Alexa VanDemark

    I think another trap in talking about Japan is that, in my experience, if you say you like anything about Japanese pop culture, the person you’re talking to automatically gets a red flag that says “OTAKU” and they don’t take your interest seriously anymore. You could be most interested in the Tokugawa Era, but for all they care, if you like Japan, people assume you must also like pop culture, and that’s all they seem to remember.

  • http://www.facebook.com/Lawnmower16 Daniel Fawson

    Man, I’ve got to admit, that Kotaku article was rather infuriating. But I feel better now, because once I read the words:

    “”Ponyo” was one of the best films I’ve ever seen in my life”

    I immediately stopped reading. As I had previously suspected when he made a sweeping generalization about modern anime’s demographic, and again when he seemed to be getting really upset about not being able to find vegetarian food, and again when he complained about cliched lyrics in pop songs as if it’s something exclusive to Japan, whoever wrote that article is a complete idiot.

  • http://twitter.com/msumisu Mariah Smith

    Nice article! Someone had to say it. I’m tired of everyone thinking all the weird stuff is mainstream. It’s on Japanese television because it’s weird to them too. This reminds me of a customer at work that told me he wanted to go to Japan because he heard all the grocery stores had robots in them and they go shopping for you while you wait in a lobby. Poor guy will be disappointed.

  • TomoeGozen

    I agree with this too! I’ve really found that to be true. Japanese studies is my major through grad/post grad, but because I’m a girl and I wear things with glitter and whatnot sometimes professors single me out all the time for being interested in ONLY pop culture. Honestly, I know so little about modern Japan compared to historical. I wish I knew more. Last week in a Japanese art film course I chose to write my critical analysis on Yojimbo. My professor was like,”Excuse me, I think you made a mistake on the sign up sheet. You wrote down Yojimbo here. Did you mean Totoro instead?” Me, “No. Yojimbo is one of my favorite movies.” Professsor,”…..are you sure.? It’s not too late to switch.” *SIGH*

  • http://twitter.com/Cupucuups Hamyo

    Great article Hashi!! I think site such as wtfjapanseriously.com and a lot of more stuff on the internet has succeed to creat an overrated stereotype thinking about Japan.

    http://okonomikatsu.blogspot.com/2013/05/permainan-tanya-kokkuri-san.html

  • Yuume

    I haven’t read that article, but I ALMOST stopped reading your comment when I read:

    “”"Ponyo” was one of the best films I’ve ever seen in my like”".

    Seriously though? There’s vegetarian options at stores, meals, and even restaurants. Obviously that person didn’t even look very hard. It is harder to find, but I don’t know what you’d expect from an island culture >_>

    I can’t even imagine reading the entire article. Either way, most of what people know about other countries is what the media feeds them. That’s why most people automatically associate Japan with weird off the wall crap. It probably doesn’t help that the media stereotypes a lot of stuff too.

    Glad you wrote this article though. I am guilty of being that person who’s saying, “Oh Japanese ___ is pretty cool!” sometimes. (I won’t lie! haha) But when talking about anything, it’s best to look at it from the pros and cons so that you have a good informed, knowledgeable opinion about, ne? When I talk to my friends about Japan, (I have a efw Otaku and even some weeaboo friends >_>) I try to keep them in perspective about stuff.

    Japan IS freaking awesome. However, Japan isn’t all bishounen and fluffy cute moe sidekicks. But it also isn’t just weird shit and xenophobes. (Which is also something else people misconstrue about Japan; in my experience, I haven’t been, but I have friends that live there/have lived there and they say that’s not the case, they aren’t xenophobes at all?)

  • Yuume

    Well…I know that most people don’t read other comments, especially on a site like that, but I somewhat enjoy the weird crap they put on wtfjapanseriously XD

    It’s a guilty pleasure. However, if people would read the comments, MOST of the time, there’s that one person who knows wtf is going on, and they comment on it and say, “It’s from a show where ___ was happening and blah blah blah *puts it into context for people*”. Even I do it on occasion. Sometimes when you put it into context and explain it, it ruins the weird factor, but at least they know what’s going on now haha

  • Yuume

    I don’t like to nitpick, but yeah, this article had quite a few places that need editing XD

  • TomoeGozen

    Ha yes I agree entirely. I’m often the one to comment context too. I also appreciate those sites for giving me something new to look into, so it’s nothing personal to the creators at all. Mostly the people who understand that to be JAPAN as a whole. Whenever people ask me about Japan, it’s never about concepts like seppuku, bushido, or even the history of Hello Kitty, but “why do they have weird TV”, or to remind me to “never ride a train in Japan because you’ll get groped”, or “did you see that they turn their cats into sushi?!” Ho hum.

  • DAVIDPD

    But the robots are so convenient!

  • Batsubob

    I read some of the very lengthy article on Kotaku and it irritated me. How could this guy say that Japanese movies suck?! Obviously he hasn’t heard of Takeshi Kitano or Akira Kurosawa. I also had an issue with his view on Comedy in Japan. Their comedy is definitely different from comedy in the U.S. but it is indeed funny. I’m guessing he’s never seen a Downtown skit or Gaki No Tsukai before. Vegetarian choices were at one time pretty hard to come by but there are more options nowadays. I clicked on his twitter link and it seems that the Kotaku article writer now lives in Oakland, CA. I guess Japan was too much for him in the longrun.

  • Reptic

    The mystery of the Kotaku article– if you’re wondering how a ridiculously long rant against Japan got published on a video game blog, it only a takes a bit of knowledge of the author to understand.

    For the last few years Tim Rogers (the author) has been submitting monthly articles for Kotaku, mainly to do with him living in Japan and working as a video game developer. Usually, though, they’re incredibly long and filled with many comments saying “TL;DR”.

    That’s just the guy’s style, I guess. When he writes, he writes a lot.

    Anyway, that specific article was written around the time when he was finally getting tired of Japan after having lived there for a while, so yeah, it comes off kind of whiny. Shortly after that he moved to Hawaii, so I guess he did act on his complaints. I don’t know where he is now though, as I don’t read his stuff much anymore.

  • http://www.facebook.com/joel.alexander.980 Joel Alexander

    The author of the “1000 things I will and won’t miss” blog kinda touched on both points in some of her posts: basically people come to Japan with this picture of it being a new and wonderful place, where trains are awesome, anime is mainstream, and people are weird. Once the novelty’s worn off, though, they suddenly realise that Japan is just another country where real people live, and do real people work, and real life happens.

  • Jon

    Before I started learning Japanese, I thought Japan was some sort of bizarre place where everything was the opposite of normal and the source of tons of weird little gadgets (some useful, some uselessly useful, and some that were just invented on drugs). It’s a little disappointing when you learn it really isn’t (come on, you’ve got to admit that the stereotypical weird Japan madhouse would be kind of fun to visit every now and then), but it’s also kind of nice to know that Japan isn’t full of insane weirdos. It’s surprising how normal Japanese people can be while simultaneously being surprising how strange they can be.

  • Kotaku-sucks

    “I’m still blown away that Kotaku ran a 15,000word rant about what sucks about Japan.”

    That guy wrote that Anime is just a bunch of shit pandering to perverts and pedophiles, except for Dragonaball which he loves! Also, it’s ridiculous to say that everything in Japan has meat in it. Japanese movies suck etc.

  • Unison square garden fan

    was all the literature that you read about japan in english??? i’m wonderin’ because it does matter as far as bias. I was thinking if all of the stuff you read was in english then isn’t it like technically writing this blog entry is taking time away that you could be spending doing stuff in japanese. i don’ tknow what your language goal is with japanese. if if it’s conversational or fluency or whatever… just sayin’ something to think about if your goal happens to be fluency.

  • shiro

    I was going to write you an informed, non-judgmental reply to finish reading the article if only because the majority of it is about work culture, which most visitors to Japan do not get to experience first-hand.,,, but immediately stopped reading your comment when you finished a sentence with “ne.”

  • shiro

    Some Japanese think that we all eat steak everyday and I have been asked if I carry a gun, but I’m not sure if that counts.

  • shiro

    I think the author of the Kotaku article probably shouldn’t have started off his little dissertation there with a rant against anime, since all it did was work the otaku up into a frothy rage to the point where they couldn’t finish reading the article (apparently). Unfortunately most of what he wrote about is true to some degree – his experience is especially unique since he worked as an *actual employee* of a Japanese company, outside of the ALT bubble. So that’s something to take into consideration, besides the fact that it’s not uncommon for expats of even many years to go through an “angry resentful” phase as part of their culture shock journey.

    I cannot stress enough how different your experience of Japan is going to be when you are a study abroad student or tourist in the big cities vs. living and working in Japan virtually anywhere outside of Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Kyoto. It’s like being in a different world.

  • shiro

    THAT SAID I am totally with you on the “Japan isn’t that weird” thing. Japan is weird, but not because everyone is walking around with tomatoes for heads. Stuff like the fact that ATMs close down at 7pm on a Saturday, now THAT is weird.

  • 古戸ヱリカ

    The correct answer is “Of course I carry a gun, how else would I hunt for more steak?”

  • 古戸ヱリカ

    I was also going to write a wicked-sweet reply, with well thought out opinions and thoughtful anecdotes and lasers and a guitar solo, but something came up.

  • 古戸ヱリカ

    I’m suddenly reminded of the 7 stages of gaijinhood:

    http://gakuran.com/the-7-stages-of-gaijinhood-revisited/

  • 古戸ヱリカ

    Personally, one of the biggest traps with regards to Japan has got to be Tissue Hime. That’s what we’re talking about, right?

  • http://profiles.google.com/jan.moren Jan Moren

    People like to use [insert far away exotic culture] as a mirror to reflect on their own humdrum lives.

    “Look how weird [different group] is! We are surely completely normal by comparison.”

    Or “[far off place] is amazing! My own life must surely be dull and pointless only because I’m held back by my own dull culture.”

    And for whatever reason, that [exotic place], that funhouse mirror, is currently Japan for some Americans. Perhaps it’s a legacy of the economic upheaval of the 1980′s, where Japanese business culture became something of an obsession. The USA has been a similar cultural mirror in some European societies.

  • http://lookoutknockhead.com/ Mike Newton

    With regard to the Kotaku article, I think the man has some salient points but they were mostly covered up by the sound of all the bitching he was doing. The most appalling aspect of the whole thing was how he clearly acted with contempt and disrespect for the Japanese culture when/where he perceived he was being wronged or didn’t agree with the way things were done. It’s no wonder Japanese companies are so wary of their dealings with foreigners when assholes like this guy are out there doing so much to tarnish our already black and blue reputation.

    Expat life has what I saw one blogger refer to as a “cycle of funk”. Every little thing that grinds on you living in a foreign culture moves you closer to the threshold of your ability to cope. Eventually you’ll tip the balance and spend a period of time, usually a week or two, hating everything about the country and culture you live in. Most folks even out and the cycle resets; some folks never make it and they wind up either leaving or living with extreme contempt for their environment and the people in it. Seems like Tim falls into the latter of these two categories.

    Thanks for writing this Hashi.

    P.S. The desktop wallpaper is nice, but I’d love to have this on a t-shirt!

  • http://www.japanesetease.net/ Jakob

    That’s what I find so annyoing as well. But I have to admit that a part part of the people who are reading manga, anime and are the “obvious” fans of Japan, fit the cliché perfectly.

  • http://justbeyondthebend.com/ Joe Dudas

    As a 2-time visitor / tourist of Japan, it’s so evident that I am as foreign as can be there – culturally, language-wise (mostly b/c of non-alpha-numerics), etc. For these reasons, I can imagine it would be incredibly difficult to assimilate if one wanted to.

    That said, the Japanese seem largely no different on the day-to-day activities, concerns, habits, cares, etc. [as anyone, of course, would expect]

    But…because of the aforementioned cultural barriers – and Japan’s historically isolationist policies – I can see why things seem “weird” to outsiders. It’s likely because those “weird” things are the only cultural nuggets that trickle-out via media to the world’s masses.

    And even though most trends are not the norm in Japan, that’s largely the only lense through which most see Japanese culture.

    There are equally “weird” trends everywhere else, but we also have a lot more visibility into the cultural evolution of how those trends took shape — so there’s less shock-factor.

    Anyway, stream of consciousness…

  • http://www.facebook.com/christopher.peregrin.stilson Christopher Stilson

    It works even if the other person doesn’t know what an otaku is or even are aware that there’s a stigma against them. My in-laws complain about “that Japanese crap” that they can hear in the background of most of the videos we send of our son being cute, and they’ve expressed fears that my attempting to teach him Japanese at the same time that I’m learning it will stunt his ability to learn English (thus showing that they know nothing about infant language development: he’s only a year old and he already recognizes that “oishii,” “yummy,” and “MMMMM” all mean the same thing, even if he can only say the last one). Now, these are people who don’t have the faintest idea what a “weeaboo” is, but they’re still indirectly accusing me of being one.

    Of course, it’s also bad when talking to actual otaku. They assume that you’re interested in the same things they are, for the same reasons, and then start namedropping characters from shows you’ve never seen…

  • PinkBarry

    My favorite Japan talking trap: “I want to teach English in Japan” = code for “I could never get laid in the states, and need to make up for lost time.” While this may seem like an exaggerated stereotype, there is a startlingly disproportionate number of hideous, skinny/balding white guys with impeccable foreign language skills “makin’ it” in Asia. Me thinks there be some truth to this one, and it’s something we should all enjoy and laugh heartily at.

  • PinkBarry

    Rogers’ assessment of “modern anime” plots pandering to pedophiles and following the principles of “one-upsmanship” stopped me dead. I find a lot of modern anime incredibly deep and sophisticated (Ergo Proxy, Paranoia Agent, anyone?) and marvel at how it finds a willing audience among mere kids. His tastes, on the other hand, appear to be limited to some of the most juvenile crap ever geared towards Saturday morning sugar junkies (“Kung fu master… robot… baseball hero?” If there’s a sadder, more cliched caricature of Japanese anime themes, I haven’t heard of it). Rogers strikes me as the type of person who’d praise USA Today for it’s consistency and succinctness while lambasting modern news media for its confusing diversity of opinions.

  • Henro 88

    Cultures are like onions, really: they have many layers, and the more layers you peel back, the more likely you are to break down into inconsolate tears.

    The thing, though, is that “weird Japan” is very, very real. Japanese culture is different from ours, obviously – but that’s just culture. People move differently, the language is different, religious values and cultural norms all different.

    But the Japanese truly are quirky. And it’s subtle, but there is this underlying joy and whimsy to the culture that “weird Japan” news articles can barely scratch the surface of. The longer you stay here, the more you realize how ESSENTIAL “weird Japan” is and how wonderful. But above all, you realize that “weird Japan” can happen any time, anywhere.

    The trap of talking about “weird Japan,” in my opinion, isn’t focusing TOO MUCH on it. Its focusing on the wrong things. The tomato hairstyle most likely WAS a one-off thing – and the doughnut heads are clearly a tiny niche – but that doesn’t change the fact that “weird Japan” is a constant, daily thing and hands down the best part of living here. It is the rare release from all the social pressure and bullshit and culture shock you live with here – when you sit down and see the weirdest god damn thing you’ve ever seen, and you feel glad to be here.

    Example: this made me laugh my ass off last night. It’s a very real commercial that is used every day in Japan:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77d3ijtPMnA

    HOW DOES HE WHISTLE LIKE THAT?

    This commercial is a sequel to this one:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77d3ijtPMnA

    Ok, I couldn’t find the original commercial – that’s an edited “five minutes of Try-san running” version. But this is seriously a real commercial that has been running for months in Japan. Trust me: you will laugh when Try-san loses his glasses.

    This IS the real Japan, not some internet cliche. And it is weird and glorious and I love it.

  • Henro 88

    “I mean what if Japan just showed clips of that show Fear Factor where they eat testicles and stuff?”

    Um…they do, actually. Well, not Fear Factor, but it is pretty common for me to walk into the living room and see my stepson watching some TV show that is running clips from YouTube or clips from random TV shows – Cops, sometimes, but do you know the show Cheaters? They run that a lot here, and I’m constantly having to tell my kids, you know, turn that garbage off.

  • Henro 88

    Akira Kurosawa is dead and Takeshi Kitano works mostly on variety shows with has-been comedians.

    Japanese movies in general do suck. This is a pretty well-established fact among…well…everyone. The movies that YOU watch may not suck, because you are specifically hand-picking the good ones – either because you don’t live in Japan and you have to go way out of your way to find them, or because you’re a fan of certain people and you seek them out.

    But Japanese movies in general have low production values and just awful writing. I mean, have you even SEEN 僕の彼女はサイボーグ?! It’s not ragging on Japan or culture shock to point this out. I don’t know anyone here in this country who regularly watches anything but foreign films. If you go to the rental place, the foreign films are presented as “regular” movies; the Japanese films are tucked away in a special “Japanese movies” wall.

    Look, when even Japanese people aren’t in denial of a negative part of Japanese culture, you can be 100% certain that it is a fact.

  • TomoeGozen

    That is REALLY interesting! You should write on that, I would like to know more. I’m really interested in the mishaps in cross-cultural communication ha, if only for the sake of understanding each other more. I was looking into getting NHK just so I can have a better idea of what the perspective is/practice listening to new ideas in Japanese, but it seems complicated through my provider.

  • tetsu66

    To me, Tofugu is one of these sites that paints Japan as somewhere strange and bizarre. Tofugu writes almost solely about “bizarre Japan” and leaves readers with a quite skewed image of Japan.

    Japan is only strange when viewed without the proper historical, cultural and geographic knowledge: Anything appears strange when taken in the wrong context. It’s stupid to compare Japan to a country like the U.S. while ignoring the fundamental differences that caused these two countries to follow different paths of cultural, economic, political and social development. Also, as mentioned in the article, most of what people think is weird about Japan are just elements of quite minor subcultures (every other place in the world also has its strange subcultures, but we somehow seem to forget this when talking about Japan). What I see here in Japan is really no more strange to me than what I see back home. The western idea that Japan is somehow “irrational” is nothing more than racism and perhaps a manifestation of sentimental imperialism.

    Please publish more articles like this and articles stressing how normal Japan really is.

  • Henro 88

    I actually have to give Japanese TV credit for doing a LOT of cross-cultural stuff. They have a show where someone from each of every G20 countries comes in and talks about their country’s culture, along with a mini-documentary segment. It’s honestly a good show. They also have Another Sky, which is just a famous person going overseas (to see “another sky”).

    But when it comes to programs that focus on “weird gaikoku,” there are no cultural mishaps. It’s just Japanese people laughing at foreigners and treading that thin line between intercultural curiosity and racism, marveling at how interesting all those gaijin are. None of the people who go overseas nor the hosts of the shows speak the local language of the places they visit.

    NHK is better than most Japanese TV, but the production values are still low for their dramas, and the really funny stuff isn’t usually on NHK. If I were you, I’d stick with anime DVDs, because that is honestly where all the talent in Japan is right now.

  • Henro 88

    Your professor is either a really light-hearted guy who is on SUPER GOOD terms with you (possible) or he is a sexist jerk. You, um…seriously that is an inappropriate comment. “Did you mean Totoro?” That is incredibly inappropriate (unless he is really close to you). Is that part of a larger pattern? Have you considered making a complaint to the department?

    Yojimbo is hands down one of the finest creations made by human hands, and Toshiro Mifune is an avatar of the Godhead itself descended from heaven to bless mankind with the blessing of growling and chonmages.

    Also, everyone knows that Totoro is about two dead girls who meet a creature from the underworld to ferry their spirits into the next realm. Nothing left to write about that movie. Your professor should know that already.

    OH! And incidentally, NO ONE here actually watches Kurosawa. Seriously, very few people recognize any of the references I make to it – though people who know me well enough know me as “the guy who wants to have sex with Toshiro Mifune.”

  • Henro 88

    That’s not a stigma against otaku, though – that’s just regular old ignorance and racism. Have you, um, considered telling your relatives that you are more worried about their racist bullshit rubbing off on your kid than any effect that “that Japanese crap” will have?

  • TomoeGozen

    Haha Your perspective is funny, seriously, do you write a blog elsewhere? You should, I’d read that. Anyway, that professor is actually a woman, and she recently found out I have this blog/web show that has kawaii in the title, and for some reason it’s made her forget my identity. It’s really bizarre. I know she doesn’t mean it. And yes, I agree about Totoro, which is why I would not want to write 20 pages on that if I had to.

    Yojimbo, well it’s one of my favorite movies, AND I tend to focus on post WWII Japan. There is a lot of critique about Kurasawa movies being a commentary on Japan’s understanding of change at this time, honestly though no more so than the other non-samurai greats like Onibaba/Kwaidan/Tokyo Story etc etc. Anyway, yeah Toshiro Mifune is kind of my hero, and I love to write about his movies. And he’s a total dreamboat. The end.

    ALL that being said, I’m now starting an independent study on post contemporary Japanese art because it’s extremely difficult to find courses that tackle Japan right NOW vs all of its great history. I also think the kawaii culture aesthetic is a good place to start knowing what brought that about. Although that is still dated to the 80′s. So I’m currently looking for some really unique artists in Japan to lose sleep over if you have anyone to recommend. I’m starting with Aida Makoto.

  • Laurennnn

    if you want to avoid the BULLSHIT that you complained about in your entry, go read it in japanese. end of story. if you’re gonna keep continuing reading about japan in english, you’re gonna keep running into that. you get what you seek… seriously, so don’t bitch about it no more.