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My first Wired column is online. It's a piece called "Reading Green Tea Leaves in Tokyo" and it's about how capitalism shows different faces in different places, how some of its localized versions are less toxic than others, less injurious to human health and human intelligence, and whether these differences are down to consumers or producers.

Scanning the Wired site, I found a really nice article entitled How mobile phones conquered Japan. It's a review of a new English-language book called Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: Mobile Phones in Japanese Life. The article made me realise how scarred my brain has become by reading (and refuting) the daily doses of crusading cynicism going on over at Neomarxisme. I now half expect every book about Japan to be an exposé of conspiracies, yakuza control, or gripes about a system that's headed for oblivion. So it's tremendously refreshing to read the conclusion of the Wired piece: "By understanding how a once-alien technology became such a natural extension of everyday life in Japan, we may yet understand what is in store for the rest of the world."

Xeni Jardin, who wrote the piece, comes to this delightfully Japanophilic conclusion (its optimism matches my own basic feeling about Japan) not after turgid, cynical analyses of the business structure or marketing history of the keitai, but with a look at Japan's history, and specifically at cultural precedents like "the legend of Sontoku (Kinjiro) Ninomiya, a Johnny Appleseed-like national folk hero often represented in statues outside bookstores and schools... most often remembered reading as he walks, burdened with bundles of firewood gathered in daily chores. The book points to this multitasker ancestor as a precursor of contemporary nagara ("while-doing-something-else") mobility, a concept now embodied in students who wander from home to class and back again, eternally gazing into a palm full of e-mails."

This sense that Japan's technological modernity (and even avant gardism) might be rooted not in incomplete emulations of the West but in something very ancient, folksy and specifically Japanese is exactly what I feel about the country; that it's a place where, as I put it in my Superlegitimacy essay, trains may look like Western trains, but are actually "a set of Japanese etiquettes and assumptions travelling through space".

I asked Hisae about this idea of the "multi-tasking tribe", the Nagara-zoku, and she came up immediately with an even older, more folksy ancestor: Prince Shotoku Taishi, a medieval multi-tasker so intelligent that he could listen to what ten people were saying, all speaking at once. He's the man in the statue to the left, and he would have loved the keitai.

It might seem odd to hold the view that Japanese phenomena are so rooted in local Japanese traditions, and yet applicable (by "Japanization") to the rest of the world, but I don't think it's a contradiction. When I think of the really successful Japanese products—Pokemon, or the films of Miyazaki, for instance—they're successful because they're full of a very specific Japaneseness. Their universality is rooted in their particularism, and their global reach comes from their local resonance.

It's odd that Marxy and I have such different views of Japan—mine culturalist, aestheticist, utopian-evangelical, his structuralist, business-oriented and pessimistic—and odder still to read, in a recent Marxy interview, that my early essays about Japan (he cites Shibuya-kei is Dead) were a big influence on the young Marxy: "He was the only one I could find who really understood what was going on there."

But it wouldn't be the first time theologians (because that's what we are, Japan theologians) have diverged. I was watching a documentary last night called "God's Rottweiler", a biography of Pope Benedict. Joseph Ratzinger and Hans Kung were both modernisers in the 1960s, responsible for bringing the Catholic church into the 20th century (Vatican 2 saw the end of Latin mass, for instance). But they soon diverged, Ratzinger deciding that liberalization was making the church lose its identity, and Kung heading leftwards into Marxist-influenced Liberation Theology. (There's a nice joke about Ratzinger and Kung at the Pearly gates here.) So which of us is Ratzinger and which of us is Kung? I leave that up to you to decide.

Confusion

Date: 2005-08-23 06:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rodaminian.livejournal.com
Momus--Am I to understand that you prefer that identity is something that, if completely false (or in some way fraudalent), that it would be better to blanket it in mystique and "otherness" (e.g. Latin mass) than to strip it away until it's core essence is revealed?

Perhaps I'm being too skttrbrained, but I think part of the "otherness" you speak of is just more of a wall between people and their life philosophies (in this case, Catholicism). I heard that they are trying to lower the age of confirmation in the Catholic Church to something like 12 or 13, as opposed to the current 15/16 range. There is a move in Ratzinger's church to create smoke screens, so people stay in the church not fully knowing what it's core tenants (outside of Jesus' death) are.

Chelsea Girl on the stereo,
Rod

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-23 06:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] butterflyrobert.livejournal.com
Churches always rely on subterfuge and scare tactics - it is the only way that they would exist at all. Momus proposes to make these absurd institutions more pleasing for the rest of us by maintaining/accentuating their otherness.

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-23 07:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rodaminian.livejournal.com
How on earth is it more pleasing to have it be even more foreign to us?

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-23 09:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] butterflyrobert.livejournal.com
Would you rather hear inane droning in a language you understand so that the meanings of the words stab your brain like knives or in a language that you don't fully understand, but sounds like exotic music?

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-23 09:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
I think that, when it comes to religion, the confusion and the clarity are the same thing.

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-24 12:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] butterflyrobert.livejournal.com
Amazingly quotable - well said!

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-24 08:54 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
warning: sycophantic

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-24 10:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Hello Mr Ross on Wye! How's the weather in Ross on Wye?

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-24 05:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] butterflyrobert.livejournal.com
Wow, he's right on schedule.

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-24 01:18 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Re: Confusion

I think that, when it comes to religion, the confusion and the clarity are the same thing.


Surely, only someone still in confusion could say that and mean it.

Re: Confusion

Date: 2005-08-24 04:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] butterflyrobert.livejournal.com
Sanity is not possible without confusion. Neither is insanity.

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