Monday, July 03, 2006



Turning Japanese, I Really Think So

One of my neighbors is in greater Tokyo, so now's as good a time to turn Japanese as any. Yes, I realize that tomorrow is July 4th, but what are we independent of anymore? The only "Coalition of the Willing" forces of any size in Iraq are US -- and British. As Janis Joplin once quipped in another context, "I mean really, man." Our national government seems to hate the French, even though they were indispensable in the American War of Independence -- against the British. But wah, they wouldn't join in the invasion of Iraq. So now they must be bad! Orwellian musical chairs? That's the way of the world. GM merging with Renault and Nissan? Now there's a real ha-ha, especially with the Germans firmly entrenched up in Rochester Hills. Writer Philip K. Dick was on to something with his bizarre twist on the Second World War II in his The Man in the High Castle (1962). Who really "won" after all? At least we have the neutral Swedes in our back yard to hand out Nobel Prizes for Peace and Literature at IKEA, thank God.

Turning Japanese again, they were early adapters in the world of gadgetry. Maybe because they're the only country on earth to have survived an atomic attack (by the Americans and British) and resultant random mutant attacks by Godzilla, Mothra, and other crazy creatures -- or maybe it's because they're so densely packed on islands and dependent on international communications and trade and sick of war (the token Japanese Army contingent is packing up in Iraq and heading home shortly) -- for whatever reason, they've been out there for some time with the cellphones, the text messaging, the interweb, the robots and the Anime; and now the rest of the world is moving in their direction. What seemed like science fiction ten ot twenty years ago is really happening. The US sent spaceships to the Moon more than thirty years ago; the Mainland Chinese will be next. Blogs are springing up everywhere, telephonics are rapidly moving from the day we had only party lines and home landlines to the day we will have only mobile units, internet connections, and God knows what else. How will education change as a result, and everything else? It takes a while for things to even begin to sink in to our primal ways of thinking.

In recent years, I've asked students how they communicate with other people. Since about 2000, they've responded that multi-purpose mobile phones / cellphones have supplanted almost everything else, but even that's just a phase. How many correspond regularly with pen and paper anymore? Answer: about three in twenty-eight. How many send paper special occasion cards regularly? Answer: about ten in twenty-eight. How many send e-cards? About the same. How many send and receive email regularly? About twenty-three in twenty-eight. How many have MySpace or similar accounts for regular communications? Maybe five in each class, and growing (the younger the student, the more likely this is true). So what's going on? Where are we going next? Hell if I know. But it's starting to feel like life in a science fiction tale, even to me, a fan of the Twilight Zone from a very young age. And keeping up with the blogging is fun, but also transforming the way we live, let alone keeping in touch.

Tora! Tora! Tora!

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I love you, even if you kicked me off your board! You're great and no more mean comments about Michelle's Spells. I'm sure she's beautiful, blah, blah,blah. But beauty is so dull right? Don't you want complexity?

JR's Thumbprints said...

My brother went to Japan on work related business. He told me that as he observed the people and their interactions with technology, he wondered why the United States was behind the times. Hard to believe, isn't it?

Panday said...

Erik,

France hasn't been much of an ally since the DeGaulle government. DeGaulle couldn't face the reality that France was no longer a great power and seemed to have a pathological obsession with sticking a thumb in the US's eye at every opportunity. Under him, France withdrew from the military arm of NATO and often sought a separate diplomatic arrangement with the Soviets.

One of my favorite writers is Trevanian. This is an excerpt from his book Shibumi. ). Scene: Two men in the Basque country of the Pyrenees Mountains- one a gruff and ethnocentric Basque, named Le Cagot, and the other a Russian German aristocrat, named Nicholas Hel. They're talking about a Frenchman whom they both despise and just insulted. I was howling when I finished this passage.

Shibumi was written back in 1979. France doesn't seem to have changed much in the past 27 years, has it?
______________________

Le Cagot patted the hostess's bottom and sent her after their food. "I don't think we have made a great friend there, Niko. And he is a man to be feared." Le Cagot laughed, "After all, his father was French and very active in the resistance."
Hel smiled. "Have you ever met one who was not?"
"True. It is astonishing that the Germans managed to hold France with so few divisions, considering that everyone who wasn't draining German resources by the clever maneuver of surrendering en masse and making the Nazis feed them was vigorously and bravely engaged in the Resistance. Is there a village without its Place de la Resistance? But one has to be fair; one has to understand the Gallic notion of resistance. Any hotelier who overcharged a German was in the Resistance. Each whore who gave a German soldier the clap was a freedom fighter. All those who obeyed while viciously withholding their cheerful morning 'bonjours' were heroes of liberty!"
Hel laughed. "You're being a little hard on the French."
"It is history that is hard on them. I mean real history, not the verite a la cinquieme Republique that they teach in their schools. The truth be known, I admire the French more than any other foreigners. In the centuries they have lived beside the Basque, they have absorbed certain virtues- understanding, philosophic insight, a sense of humor- and these have made them the best of the 'others'. But even I am forced to admit that they are a ridiculous people, just as one must confess that the British are bungling, the Italians incompetent, the American neurotic, the Germans romantically savage, the Arabs vicious, the Russians barbaric, and the Dutch make cheese. Take the particular manifestation of French ridiculousness that makes them attempt to combine their myopic devotion to money with the pursuit of phantom 'gloire'. The same people who dilute their burgundy for modest profit willingly spend millions of francs on the atomic contamination of the Pacific Ocean in the hope that they will be thought to be the technological equals of the Americans. They see themselves as the feisty David against the grasping Goliath. Sadly for their image abroad, the rest of the world views their actions as the ludicrous egotism of the amorous ant climbing a cow's leg and assuring her that he will be gentle."

Cheri said...

Ahh Eric, the beauty of the "myspace" accounts. I've had one for over two years and met some crazy people because of it. I missed your posts, I'm catching up on all of them right now!

Luma Rosa said...

Who not to follow the technological development, will be even those that they do not know to read and to write. E to think that in the some civilizations that exist in the world the man they use more the weapon of that a penxs to write. Beijus

ZZZZZZZ said...

Angela I don't want to be mean but i think you need help. You need to let go of your delusions of you and erik. i'm sure he'd greatly appreciate it. once again i mean this sincerely.... i'm not trying to be mean or anything.

Erik Donald France said...

Thanks, y'all, for the comments! Much appreciated!

~~Erik