metablue wrote:Interesting. I think of a salaryman as anyone with life long employment, particularly Japanese-style. Joining the company at a certain time of year with a block of other new entrants, picking out the spot and bringing everyone's bento for hanami, wearing suits and singing the company song. Circulating through different departments to learn how the company works as a whole. Getting a pension. Following a track through the company. That would make anyone from new recruit to upper management a salaryman.
Yes. "Salary man" simply means "salaried (white-collar) worker". That's all it means. But upper-level staff usually refer to themselves as 係長, 部長, 課長, 副社長, 社長, etc, unless they are playing the old "humble" game. So usually, you can assume that people who call themselves "salaryman" are lower-ranking. It's a pretty dependable bet.
My friend (Jerry) said he met a student in Japan while playing an online game years ago. They got to know each other quite well and Jerry suggested that the guy come to visit. The guy said he couldn't because he was about to become a salaryman. Jerry suggested he could come on his vacation, but the guy said "You don't understand, I can't just leave, I'm a salaryman". Perhaps the guy was particularly ambitious, perhaps he was feeling depressed and blew things out of proportion, or perhaps he didn't want to visit. Jerry seemed to think that the guy's path was laid out before him for several years, and overseas vacations were out of the question for a long time.
Generally in Japan, it is difficult for office workers to take vacations. It's not due to company regulations, or a lack of available vacation days. They're afraid that they're going to let the team down. If he goes on vacation, his coworkers will have to work harder to cover him. And they may begin to resent him for it. So goes the reasoning, anyway.
And although I haven't experienced it myself, typical Ruth Benedict Japanese culture lessons say that Japanese people are likely to seek revenge about these sorts of things. That means additional work assigned to them; getting overlooked for promotions; exclusion from events with co-workers; blah, blah, blah. Whether this is true or not, I don't know.
Anyway, office workers in Japan often don't take their full yearly allotment of vacation time for exactly this reason.
I thought of it because of the intermediate lesson where the gakuchou admires Yoku's thesis and says he'll write her a letter of recommendation to Somy. It sounded odd to get a letter for a specific company. Here you'd get a letter for a university program, but probably not to a company unless the dean knew someone there. It sounded like part of the lifetime employment system. You need to choose well and get letters of reference for a specific company if you're going to be wedded to them for life. It would be like choosing a grad school in its importance.
Often, the school you go to has connections with numerous companies. (Perhaps because an executive of the school or one of his family members studied there.) They recommend students to these companies upon graduation (the best companies get the best students, etc.)
I don't know about major universities, but this is EXTREMELY common among 短期大学 ("tanki daigaku", roughly equivalent to "junior college"). Every girl I know who went to 短大 ended up with a recommendation to a specific company of the school's choice. Not only that, but they actually LANDED the job in question with little effort. It seems like these letters of recommendation are pretty much a free pass to get into the company.