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Archive for February, 2007

Can Wii Be Friends?

February 18th, 2007

If you own a Nintendo Wii, and you think I am ridiculously cool, then I think we should be Wii friends.
(Yes, I realize that if you create a Venn Diagram including circles for people who own a Wii, people who think I’m cool, and people who want to associate with me, that it is indeed a minority group in the shared section, but hey – I’ve gotta try.) So…any JETs, any kids in the US, any random strangers? If you want to be my Wii Friend, please post your Wii number, or shoot it to me by email at deas (at) rockinginhakata (dot) com, or another one of my email addresses. Yay for Miis! 8-)

Deas’ Wii: 6967 1406 3772 0289

PS – I considered all kinds of cornball titles with obvious puns, but got lazy and thought this was better than the…um…dirtier ones. See? I can behave. As my students will readily tell you, I am a “nice guy.” Ha ha.

PPS – I finished the book I was reading. The Japanese Mind is now listed under my Recent Reads links. The last couple of essays were on the following topics:

- 先輩/後輩 Sempai-Kouhai (seniority in relationships)
- 集団意識 Shuudan Ishiki (group consciousness)
- 葬式 Soushiki (funerals)
- 内と外 Uchi to Soto (“in” and “out” dichotomy)
- 侘び/寂び Wabi-Sabi (simplicity & elegance as “beauty”)
- 贈答 Zoutou (gift giving custom)

It was an interesting book. Was psyched to see that I’ve read some of the source material listed in the bibliography. Most notably Nakamura’s Ways of Thinking of Eastern Peoples: India – China – Tibet – Japan. My senior seminar class at Furman tackled that one, and I even knew it was Nakamura before I checked the citations. Awesomeness. (Or is that a sad thing? I don’t know.) :-P

Deas Customary Drivel

Hidden Cove

February 16th, 2007

Here are some pictures I took of an area around the Funaori Seto (Boat-folding Seto) area, specifically of a small island called Niwatori Kojima (Little Chicken Island), a hidden cove, and two camping areas. They are random, but kinda cool. I took them the day before yesterday on the way home from Omishima. Hope you enjoy them. Remember, while looking at images, you can type “P” or “N” for “previous” or “next” respectively. “X” closes the window. Check them out.


Deas Customary Drivel, Media, Photos

A Response

February 14th, 2007

A fellow Ehime dwelling JET, a CIR named Aaron who is a really cool dude, recently popped a note out on our email list linking us to an article featured in the Daily Yomiuri. It was written by a professor named James W. Porcaro, who teaches ESL at Toyama University. It was written as an opinion piece – decidedly anti-ALT. It was based upon an earlier interview with a different professor and former JET ALT – Michael Auslin, who teaches Japanese history and assorted seminars at a small college called Yale University. I was rather taken aback by Mr. Porcaro’s piece, and felt compelled to respond in a closed manner to those who read our email list. I also feel comfortable posting this on my own website. I may decide to refinish this rudimentary email and submit it as a response to the Daily Yomiuri, but I want to investigate how my host institution, schools, and supervisor would feel about that before I give it any serious thought. Anyway, in its current form, it is nothing more than a collection of thoughts written in about 5 minutes after having read both articles.

Background reading:
Mr. Porcaro’s article –
Speak Up / Time to end the use of ALTs
(February 9th, 2007: Daily Yomiuri)
Mr. Tom Baker’s interview with Mr. Auslin –
JET impresses a generation:
Yale professor lauds program for broad impact

(January 25th, 2007: Daily Yomiuri)
Read more…

Deas Customary Drivel, Unsolicited Commentary

Live from Omishima

February 13th, 2007

I guess I shouldn’t admit to posting during work hours, but that is exactly what I am doing. I don’t feel particularly bad about it, though. Why? Because 1) nobody is using this computer (and the guy on the computer next to me is playing solitaire…and has been for an hour and 23 minutes), and 2) I finished all of my classes for the day. So there. :-)

I started reading a book called The Japanese Mind today. It is a collection of short essays on all kinds of Japanese cultural concepts that was written by students at Ehime University in Matsuyama, edited by Roger J. Davies and Osamu Ikeno. (Matsuyama is my prefecture’s capital.) I know I shouldn’t hold them to a higher standard, but after I read that the goal was “error-free” English in the introduction, I couldn’t help but be nitpicky. Not that I’ve ever done that before… I’ve already found 3 typos. Aileen is reading the same book, so maybe we can have really intelligent sounding chats in front of other people when we’re done. Anyhoo – while I know the book was not designed to be read cover-to-cover, the essays I read today were based on the following concepts:

- 曖昧 Aimai (ambiguity)
- 甘え Amae (dependence)
- 天下り Amakudari (“descent from heaven”)**
- 美学 Bigaku (sense of beauty)
- 武士道 Bushidou (way of the warrior)
- 沈黙 Chinmoku (silence in communication)
- 男女関係 Danjyo Kankei (male-female relationship dynamics)
- 道 Dou (uses, meanings, & consequences of the kanji “dou”)
- 頑張り Gambari (patience & determination)
- 義理 Giri (social obligation)
- 腹芸 Haragei (implicit communication)
- 隔たると馴染む Hedataru to Najimu (personal space)
- 本音と建て前 Honne to Tatemae (private vs. public stances)
- 家 Ie (uses, meanings, & consequences of the kanji “ie”)

I considered answering one question from each essay’s included discussion materials, but I decided that it might bore you out of your minds…on the other hand, if anybody wants my take (yeah right!), feel free to ask. I can at least tell you which essays I found helpful, which ones I found woefully incomplete, which ones I thought were written by would-be classic “PhD candidates” according to the good Dr. Leavell (e.g. inconclusive for the purposes of remaining academically balanced…kind of…more noncomittal than anything else), etc. Some of these dichotomies are helpful, if not for actually understanding Japanese society, for understanding the construct within which the people who study Japanese society attempt to frame it – whether or not that has any basis in contemporary Japan. I have personally written about soto-uchi, mono no aware, amae, and honne to tatemae in various classes, for instance. Plus, they come up in lectures and books a lot, so it’s nice to have a working understanding of them as buzz concepts. Anyway, enough of the boring stuff.

I also hit my regular blogroll just to see what was up. 2 of my buddies delivered for me. Clay at The Hopeless Romantic had a good post on current events and racism in Japan. Readers who are familiar with Cartoon Network’s The Boondocks (the characters from which have yet to perpetrate any “terrorist” acts on U.S. citiesahem…unlike the Aqua Teen Hunger Force…) will find his post interesting. He also links to a snowballed-from-a-blog story from Yamanashi Prefecture that recently hit the mainstream news. Meanwhile, Megan at Constantly Baffled linked me to probably the funniest web comic that I have seen, excepting Penny Arcade. (You have to be a nerd to understand either of them, but Megan’s find – called “xkcd,” is waaaay more highbrow on occasion, and thus more rewarding I’d say.) Anyway, I enjoyed their posts enough to pass them along, so give them a visit. 8-)

** Amakudari is a phrase referring to the shady political method by which “senior bureaucrats…are allowed to take important positions with private or semiprivate companies after retirement,” which sort of guarantees that they’ll have a huge sum of wealth coming to them when their real retirement comes. And they get shielded from huge screwups they may make…etc. It’s a system to make sure that people at the top who fail don’t fail…and could be tangentially related to the Western idea of the bigwig who jumps with a “golden parachute.” Kinda. Sorta. Ish. Loosely ish.

Deas Customary Drivel, Unsolicited Commentary

3 Day Weekend Stupor

February 12th, 2007

Everything I did this weekend was done in my apartment. Most of it was laundry, dishes, cooking & cleaning, and goofing off with the computer. I have been messing with implementing some AJAX features for inline “read more” links – but I am no good with editing PHP or CSS, and wound up breaking more things than I fixed. Then again, it could just be theme complications. I suppose it doesn’t really make that much difference, though. I reverted to using the standard “more” link. Hope it doesn’t bug you guys at all. (The JET entry and $200 Taco entry both have the more link implemented, so you don’t get scared away by the shear length of my blog thoughts. At least, not until you click the more link.) Just thought the front page was starting to look a bit…gargantuan.

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Anyway, I also wound up listening to music a lot as I did my chores, and I hit upon an old favorite of mine that I thought I’d share. It’s called “myth0 ex” (not a typo) from the album Nu-En-Jin, by a group called Mortal. I liked these guys since my good friend Dwight hooked me up with a torn up copy of their album Fathom. I fell for the audio samples from big sci-fi movies (Alien, Dune, etc.) in the midst of their melodic glitch-tech digital grunge sound. Anyway, cool fact: my favorite band, Switchfoot, got Jerome Fontamillas from Mortal to join up with Switchfoot after they’d released Learning to Breathe. He was onboard for the most recent 2 albums. I met him (and all of them) at a summer music festival a while back. Anyhoo – the point of that back story was to tell you that this track features Jon Foreman, the lead man from Switchfoot, on vocals. It’s cool to hear both ends of the sound – Jerome + Switchfoot and Jon + Mortal. Cool stuff. Anyway, I like it. So don’t bash it too badly if you hate it. :-P

Deas Customary Drivel, Media, Music

JET (ALT) Interview Revisited

February 11th, 2007

I am working on the JET Programme as an ALT (or AET, depending on your preference) as you know. I have many friends who are starting to get really anxious about their interviews which are coming up in less than 2 weeks or so…which reminded me. I was planning on doing a podcast on the JET interview process, but never got around to it due to switching software, job stuff, and general forgetfulness. I did, however, go into my JET interview with the goal of reporting on it later. So, I armed myself with a legal pad and a pen in the car, and left them on the passenger’s seat. Then, I went and did my interview, walked straight back to the parking garage, and wrote until I ran out of things to write. Below is the email that stems from that frenzied jot-session.
Read more…

Deas Customary Drivel, Unsolicited Commentary