Help Japanese >>Smart Internet Solutions

As of 2024/06/27 03:44:19  
DB: BASE de DATOS, Biblioteca del Centro Cultural de la Embajada de Japon
Print Page Print Page
Created: 2011/03/07 00:46:32 JSTLastUpdate:2020/08/28 02:36:51 JST
RUBRO HISTORIA de la CULTURA
TITULO Dogs And Demons (Tales from the Dark Side of Japan) (š)
AUTOR Alex Kerr
EDITORIAL Hill and Wang
ISBN 0-8090-9521-1
IDIOMA INGLES
CODIGO INTERNO HC-0191
NOTA (š)(In an ancient tale, a Chinese emperor asks his court painter about the easiest and most difficult subjects to paint. The painter replies, LDogs are difficult, demons are easy.L To Alex Kerr, a longtime resident expert and observer, JapanLs LdogsL are the vital activities that sustain an ecologically and culturally responsible economy, while the expedient LdemonsL are the million-dollar boondoggles that have bulldozed and cemented over so much of Japan today.@^LDogs and DemonsL offers tales from the dark side of JapanLs well-known modern accomplishments. For JapanLs problems go far beyond its dire economic plight, beyond the failures of its banks and pension funds. And Kerr discusses subjects that are all too often disregarded in the Western press when the focus is on finance and business : JapanLs endangered environment (seashores lined with concrete, roads leading to nowhere in the mountains), its Lmonument frenzyL, the decline of its once magnificent cinema, the destruction of cities such as Kyoto and construction of drab new ones, the attendant collapse of its tourism industry.@^It is KerrLs contention that all these unhealthy developments show the devastating boomerang effect of an educational and bureaucratic system designed to produce manufactured goods --and little else. This is what he calls JapanLs Lfailure of modernismL, and a mere upturn in economic growth will not quickly remedy it. He assails the foreign experts who, often dependent on Japanese government and business support, fail to address these internal signs of illness, and warns of the dangers of ignoring the monument parks, the garish comics and Pokemon gizmos, the bridges to nowhere, the Ponzi schemes that enrich the bureaucrats but impoverish the people. Kerr himself is willing to confront these demons, however, and the mixed blessings of JapanLs outdated notion of what modernity is. LHow Japan went bonk is one of the strange and terrible tales of the late twentieth centuryL, he writes.@^Meanwhile, what of the Japanese people themselves? Kerr, who has lived among them for thirty-five years, writes of the Japanese with humor and passion, for LpassionL, he says, Lis part of the story. Millions of Japanese feel as heart-broken at what is going on as I do. My Japanese friends tell me, LPlease write this --for us.LL^@ŸAlex Kerr, educated at Yale, Oxford, and Keio universities, is the author of many monographs and articles in both Japanese and English. His last book, LLost JapanL, was the first by a foreigner to win the Shincho Gakugei Literary Prize for nonfiction. He lives in Kyoto and Bangkok.)

   

[ Go to TOP ]