“What Is
I sometimes don’t understand any more how today’s Japanese see themselves in the world, when I hear the reactions of influential media figures or accomplished artists when they visit the US – the country that has arguably had the greatest influence on post-World War II Japan. Such reactions, incidentally, are much harder to come by nowadays compared to, say, 30 years ago when magazines, newspapers and TV used to be filled with the accounts and comments by curious and excited writers, artists and ordinary folks eagerly heading for foreign shores.
The Japanese today on the whole seem much more interested in what goes on at home than what goes on abroad. One theory says they are now in the “introverted phase” of their centuries-old inward-outward cycle in the direction of their collective energy. (The decades of military and economic expansion leading up to WWII would be an example of an extroverted phase, while the closed-door policy of the Tokugawa shogunate era up to Meiji restoration would be another introverted phase.) This is a bit ironic in an age when Japanese people can be more confident of their nation’s cultural influence in the world and more satisfied with their relative standard of living than ever before.
So here is one puzzling reaction. Shigesato Itoi, a popular essayist, copy-writer and influential media personality recently visited Las Vegas for the first time, and wrote: “It’s like grown-up (otonappoi). To have fun gambling is a grown-up pastime, and feeling very comfortable about having lots of money to spend is also grown-up-like. In their male-female relationships too, I sense this grown-up-ness that makes me feel nostalgic.
“That would mean people who don’t drink, aren’t interested in gambling and, moreover, don’t have much money to spend are ‘children (kodomo).’ I guess it’s me I’m talking about.”
So here’s a media personality with considerable following in
Whether the
Incidentally the word otona or grown-up is a well-worn cliché in Japanese ads plugging everything from brandy and watches to fashionwear and the atmosphere of a 5-star hotel lobby. Equivalent to ‘sophisticated” or “mature,” it connotes something so cool and, well, sophisticated that it’s almost unattainable (unless you buy that hand-crafted Swiss watch).
Over 60 years since the end of WWII, the habit of always comparing themselves to Americans and the
He went on: “It’s been about 20 years since my first trip to
Most us are Canadians of Japanese ancestry or Japanese who migrated here after WWII. So either our forefathers, grandparents, parents or ourselves must have made a conscious decision to leave behind that “world of Japan”—with its unique mix of complex familial obligations and social responsibilities along with cherished friendships and lifestyle amenities—to make a new “start” in wide open (?)
That would inevitably lead to the question “What part of me is not Japanese?” Belief in my God-given rights as an individual? Ability to treat strangers decently as fellow citizens? Ability to stick to my own choice when everyone else prefers something else in a group situation? Belief in fairness as a core value? Appreciation of moments of solitude? Whatever this part may be made up of, and it could well be bigger than the “Japanese part,” its something our brothers and sisters back in
What began as a puzzle ends as a puzzle, and I can only thank those of you still reading this.
Allow me to close with a reminder of what numerous men working in companies in