Branch (
branchandroot) wrote2009-01-30 01:28 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
What /is/ this?
Okay, seriously, what the fuck?
My rant on women in KHR was far from the first thing I've written castigating some anime/manga or other for presenting women as useless frills or objectified sex shows or whatever other negative stereotype was in question. I'm fairly sure it wasn't the first time such an entry has been linked on a meta comm.
So why is this particular entry drawing so much fire? I just ran across yet another (annoyingly clueless) screed against it while googling for a KHR timeline for pity's sake!
Is there really such a concentration of anti-feminist women (I shudder that such a phrase can still be written) in KHR, or did this particular entry just happen to fall into the orbit of a small knot of them and I have the bad luck to keep stumbling over their excrescence?
My rant on women in KHR was far from the first thing I've written castigating some anime/manga or other for presenting women as useless frills or objectified sex shows or whatever other negative stereotype was in question. I'm fairly sure it wasn't the first time such an entry has been linked on a meta comm.
So why is this particular entry drawing so much fire? I just ran across yet another (annoyingly clueless) screed against it while googling for a KHR timeline for pity's sake!
Is there really such a concentration of anti-feminist women (I shudder that such a phrase can still be written) in KHR, or did this particular entry just happen to fall into the orbit of a small knot of them and I have the bad luck to keep stumbling over their excrescence?
Re: Sorry...I babble more at night.
That makes sense, though. The history I've read seems to paint the cities as the points of crisis and contact--the places where big politics happen, the places people try to capture in wars, the places where everyone is compressed enough to put extra work into asserting their own place/identity. Kind of like shouting over the 'noise'. Maybe the more rural areas have enough elbow room to change less noticeably, more gradually. Maybe small communities just produce a stronger consensus, with less room for dramatic breaks between parties and more need to keep everyone at least marginally happy.
I'll be kind of entertained if the government looks around one day and realizes that everything is already re-negotiated, grassroots, while they weren't looking.
Re: Sorry...I babble more at night.
In talking to my children, only two of my girls have plans for after MIDDLE school. The rest of them think college is a waste of time, but they don't want to be housewives either. They're still young, so I have hope. I also don't know if its the rural (actually my area is more like suburban but with farms) mentality, where its better to stay at home and help the family.
At the same time most of Japan's small towns and villages are disappearing as the children from those towns realize there's so much more in the cities, and not just in terms of money.
My students are a little less likely to think in terms of "We Japanese" but they still show signs of it from time to time. Getting them to discuss something is like watching a meeting of Yes Men.
Re: Sorry...I babble more at night.
I am going to be very curious to see what Japan makes of itself next. Based on its history it seems to be a culture that can be amazingly adaptable and amazingly stubborn at the same time. At some point I really may have to see about writing up some kind of article on Japan and the US as mirrors of each other. The same and reversed, both.
Re: Sorry...I babble more at night.
Have you read "Why The Japanese Can't Think"? I can't find it online, and of course the copy I have with credits is back at my office, but its an interesting read. This is a slightly updated, tho economy based, view of the same thing: http://www.newsweek.com/id/73117
I think its a scary reflection on my younger students...there is little to no expansion to the basic structure I teach them. Today was "Did you _____?" and most of them gave the rote answers. When I started mixing it up with "Did you ______ on the _______?" then I got confused stares, even after translating it into Japanese for them. It can be fairly disturbing.
Re: Sorry...I babble more at night.
Oh, ouch. Yeah, if that happens intellectually too I can see how it would lend itself to nothing but rote.
And of course the established interests would like it that way and not see the threat or problem, long term. It's comfy that way. Even in US schools, which allegedly place a far stronger emphasis on critical thinking and problem solving, there is almost zero support for actually trying to change the curriculum to teach those things. Argh.
Re: Sorry...I babble more at night.
On the plus side, there is this bit of sunshine concerning Japan. At least they're trying to do something about their demographic problem that ISN'T encouraging women to be constantly pregnant. However its disheartening that Japan wouldn't do anything until now to encourage thinkers to stay. Even if they article focuses on poorer immigrant families, imagine what language programs could do for its intellectual community. I will point out that some McDonald's already offer English language programs to their workers, for very reduced costs.
Re: Sorry...I babble more at night.
*stares at the article* That's... that's huge. I mean, Japan's public and approved image for the last *thinks* four hundred years almost has been so completely insular. So utterly anti-outsiders. Wow. If that initiative works, I imagine it really will be a turning point.