Slow magazines
Jan. 10th, 2006 11:06 amAt Kikuya Bookshop you can take time over your slow magazines, bring a ton of them to a cafe table and flip through them while drinking a matcha au lait, shoot photos of them, then put them back on the shelf. Exactly the sort of anti-materialistic slow life the magazines themselves endorse!

Keywords: life, slow life, LOHAS, organic, natural, huts in the forest, wooden furniture (with discreet Apple computers), simplicity, sleep, wabi sabi patina, hanging bare lightbulbs, the avoidance of ostentation, post-materialism, eco-friendly, baking bread, making your own clothes, having babies, Scandinavian coffee pots, plants, large-format photography, subtly faded, delicate colours, old American signs, Little-House-on-the-Prairie puritan style, gentleness, Okinawa, pleasantness, bathing, rustic food, holistic herbal medicine, French peasant produce, artisans, older Asian lifestyles from other Asian countries, female friendship, Tanizaki's "In Praise of Shadows", idealism, toddlers, quality coffee and tea, healthy green vegetables, cooking, sewing and beadwork, affection for the very old, tender-mindedness, urban longing for the rural, traditional Japanese values, leisure, relaxation, refinement, fertility, quality of life.

Keywords: life, slow life, LOHAS, organic, natural, huts in the forest, wooden furniture (with discreet Apple computers), simplicity, sleep, wabi sabi patina, hanging bare lightbulbs, the avoidance of ostentation, post-materialism, eco-friendly, baking bread, making your own clothes, having babies, Scandinavian coffee pots, plants, large-format photography, subtly faded, delicate colours, old American signs, Little-House-on-the-Prairie puritan style, gentleness, Okinawa, pleasantness, bathing, rustic food, holistic herbal medicine, French peasant produce, artisans, older Asian lifestyles from other Asian countries, female friendship, Tanizaki's "In Praise of Shadows", idealism, toddlers, quality coffee and tea, healthy green vegetables, cooking, sewing and beadwork, affection for the very old, tender-mindedness, urban longing for the rural, traditional Japanese values, leisure, relaxation, refinement, fertility, quality of life.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 02:21 am (UTC)That's a nice string of keywords.
Date: 2006-01-10 02:41 am (UTC)Since most of my ranting recently has been so opposing, I feel the need to let you know how much I appreciate your writing and art.
Gambatte!!!
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 02:55 am (UTC)Nice song, very wabi sabi! Unfortunately, although my own land has wooden huts aplenty and lots of Slow Life traditions just waiting to be revived, its industrial masses are not yet quite as post-industrial as the Japanese public. Partly it's just numbers and wealth: Scotland's population is 5 million, Japan's is 125 million.
But it's also the fact that there just isn't as much life in which to slow down and take your time in Scotland. A Glaswegian male lives only 68.7 years (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/3172229.stm), compared to a Japanese male's 78.3 years (http://web-japan.org/trends/lifestyle/lif031121.html).
I dare say Tilda Swinton and John Byrne are bringing up their twins in their Nairn, Morayshire home in a style rather like the one featured in these magazines, but to find a similar sensibility in the West on this Japanese scale I think you'd have to go to Sweden.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 02:55 am (UTC)"I may be navel-gazing, but I'm gazing into the navel of life!"
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 03:03 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 03:08 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 04:10 am (UTC)Just a Thought
Date: 2006-01-10 04:43 am (UTC)Re: Just a Thought
Date: 2006-01-10 04:55 am (UTC)And obviously there's a bit of a humourous paradox in the fact that non-materialist magazines want to be bought, and want to sell you things (they subsist on advertising, like other magazines), hence my joke about how the mags "endorse" my non-acquisition of them as purchased items.
Re: Just a Thought
Date: 2006-01-10 04:58 am (UTC)Re: Just a Thought
Date: 2006-01-10 06:07 am (UTC)I suppose this is where the silver lining in my warey mind lies, in the fact that once people are satisfied as consumers and individuals, they will hopefully want something diffrent (i.e. Im sick of an industrial style economy that scars the landscape, I want an eco-friendly alternative). Let's hope, as you sugest, that people will start to notice the damages from the industrial system, and propel a post-industrial SlowLife into the future. What are you doing today?-Jed
a po ro jii
Date: 2006-01-10 06:08 am (UTC)m(_ _)m
Moushiwake nai.
Re: Just a Thought
Date: 2006-01-10 06:36 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 06:59 am (UTC)http://dacafe.petit.cc/
http://www.dacafe.org
Re: Just a Thought
Date: 2006-01-10 07:49 am (UTC)http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/20/
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 09:47 am (UTC)You're not trying to tell us something about you and Hisae, are you?
Re: Just a Thought
Date: 2006-01-10 12:37 pm (UTC)compelling
Date: 2006-01-10 01:43 pm (UTC)--Stephanie
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 01:52 pm (UTC)happy: in
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 02:36 pm (UTC)unemployment in areas decimated of services and industry is almost third generation now..lots of leisure with a DIY attitude ..if not theres the chemical method of slowing down..
i often used to see Japanese cultural movements as trends or fashions to be dropped once people align professionally with the society
thanks to your blog i am encouraged to delve deeper and try and bring it all back home..
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 02:47 pm (UTC)"There are ways to be 'post-industrial' that the West will also eventually discover. They are not refusals of the West by losers, but refinements of the West by winners."
from your Slow Life link
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 03:27 pm (UTC)I'm not sure anyone perceives these as "cutting edge" either. Just for late 20s/early 30s women who are out of the fashion rat-race.
Nice curation, though!
Marxy
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 04:32 pm (UTC)slow food for a slow life...
Date: 2006-01-10 05:03 pm (UTC)http://www.pbs.org/frontlineworld/rough/2005/11/japan_the_slow.html
http://www.slowfood.com/
http://www.soilassociation.org/web/sa/saweb.nsf/OtherDocs/le_editorial010404.html
http://www.slowfoodfoundation.com/
http://www.slowfood.com/eng/sf_cose/sf_cose_organizz_jap.lasso
cute formalism
Date: 2006-01-10 06:24 pm (UTC)I think the bit about the political role of cuteness in Japan is particularly interesting. Have you encountered any instances of cuteness being used "to soften up the vertical society"?
Re: cute formalism
Date: 2006-01-10 06:59 pm (UTC)I thought the NYT article was doing the same thing, actually: pulling us in with a cute panda picture, then making us take on trust a whole lot of statements prefaced by vague appeal-to-authority phrases like "researchers say... evolutionary scientists believe... Madison Avenue knows... experts tell us..." None of these people were named or quoted directly, you were just supposed to take it all on trust. Cute!
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-10 10:42 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-11 06:01 am (UTC)spiritual/slowlife mag
Date: 2006-07-31 01:34 pm (UTC)Anyway, a mag you might want to check out is here:
http://www.el-aura.com
More spiritually oriented, but with green lifestyle suggestions (cosmetics, retreats, etc.)
Ive been living in stinky Bangkok for half a year now; yearning for Japan...mainly the inaka and onsen...which lead me to the initial Google search that lead me more.
peace-
JJ
Re: spiritual/slowlife mag
Date: 2006-07-31 02:24 pm (UTC)Re: spiritual/slowlife mag
Date: 2009-09-07 11:45 am (UTC)Deptford Plumbers (http://deptford.able-plumbing.co.uk)