Bueller_007 wrote:It's not like North Americans cover all of the gory details of their own conquests. Smallpox-infested blankets, anyone?
SHHHHHHHHH! Now everyone's gonna want one!
Sean
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metablue wrote:I think they mentioned the smallpox blankets in Canadian school. It was a welcome break from endless history lessons about people in canoes exploring the wilderness and skinning beavers.
For some reason Americans are often surprised that I didn't learn American history in school in NZ. We did a little, but it was in the Race Relations and Conflict module along with South Africa =/ That was also a welcome break. I went to a girls' school and they tried to focus on women's role in NZ history. There isn't much NZ history to start with, so we ended up learning a lot about women who set up tuberculosis camps and others who taught soldiers about VD in the WWs. I still feel a bit sick when I remember it all.
Back on topic, has anyone here read this book or heard this guy interviewed? He studied the hikikomori and women who live at home into their 30s without marrying and having kids and sees them as Japan's canaries in the coal mine.
http://www.shuttingoutthesun.com
Do you think he's accurate? It all seemed a bit gloomy to me, but I heard a podcast interview and he sounded like a very reasonable guy who does his research.
Charles wrote:metablue wrote:Wow, that's fascinating. I hadn't thought of it that way before. Where did you learn this?
Thanks! I minored in Japanese and have read a wide variety of books. Unfortunately, none of the culture books I've read go into much depth on the foreigner thing. Travel books talk about it to varying degrees and online sources are pessimistic. The area where Japan's relationship with foriegners is explored most, though, is history (Tokugawa and the Jesuits, Commodore Perry, the European empires carving up mainland Asia). So I've been trying to piece stuff together.
Sadly, I haven't been to Japan yet, but that's because, like you, I was worried about the strange juxtaposition of all bad and good stuff I heard about their treatment of foreigners. Since then, I've been trying to find the most optimistic and reasonable way to understand it before I go. When I do go there, I don't want to be another hapless gaijin. I want to be both understanding and understandable.Bueller_007 wrote:... and they know they're not going to be fully welcomed into Japanese society anyway ...
So, aren't you saying that kind of bad foreign behavior is the result, not the cause?
00017 wrote:i'm not surprised at all by the lack of English in Japan. what's the big deal?
look at America and its big fear of foreign languages. How many kids these days take a French or Spanish class for 3 years, and then don't remember a damn thing?
Please look at your own country's education system before you start dropping critiques on Japanese methods.