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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!ucbvax!mtxinu!sybase!herb
- From: herb@sybase.com (Herb Lison)
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.japan
- Subject: Re: Just say no to Tabloid Royal News!!
- Message-ID: <28270@sybase.sybase.com>
- Date: 20 Jan 93 14:16:35 GMT
- References: <27851@sybase.sybase.com> <1993Jan14.061957.18495@netcom.com> <1993Jan14.172443.6764@Princeton.EDU>
- Sender: news@Sybase.COM
- Organization: Sybase, Inc.
- Lines: 35
-
- In article <1993Jan14.172443.6764@Princeton.EDU> elt@mutei.Princeton.EDU (Ed Turner) writes:
-
- >I'm not sure what I want to say about this phenomenon (which I admit is
- >not entirely unique to Japanese considerations, but I think it is
- >particularly common), except that I just don't get it. Why be
- >fascinated by geisha or kabuki but be indifferent (at best) to hostess
- >clubs or karaoke? Why romanticize the world of the samurai but dispise
- >that of the salarymen? Etc.
-
- There is a rather large and erroneous assumption that because one
- does not want to see western style tabloid nonsense about the Japanese
- royal family, that one dislikes Japanese popular culture. Tabloid
- journalism is repellant not because it is popular but because it
- usually gets it wrong and in any case does not let us see the things
- that to me are of most compelling human interest. I would be most
- interested to hear about the significance of the Crown Prince's engagement
- to a highly educated and accomplished woman and whether that signifies
- any sea change in Japanese attitudes towards women. I do not expect
- to find that information in tabloid news which will most likely
- bombard us with details of her private life along the lines of Chuck,
- Di and Fergie, factoids which might be of interest if they were
- connected with a close friend or relative, but which are pure voyeurism
- when related to stranger, no matter how important a public figure that
- person might be.
-
-
- As to Japanese popular culture, the more the better. The Japanese
- talent for the pleasures of daily life is just as visible at the corner
- noodle shop as at any Urasenke tea ceremony, maybe more so. In any
- event, I don't believe the current publicity around the Crown Prince`s
- engagement has a lot to do with popular culture. It is more likely
- an attempt to imitate the British press, which I think would be a huge
- mistake.
-
- Herb Lison
-