animerevue

November 9, 2007

Foreigners’ relationship with Japanese slippers, International Pocky Day, and reading my wife’s English homework from 20 years ago

I'm often asked how I can come with so many observations about Japan, to which I usually respond that it's hard to filter them out, since Japan is literally all around me. Like most people who love onsen (hot springs) and sento (traditional Japanese public baths) here, I keep a basket in my car that contains all the bath related things I need: razor, toothbrush, small towel, a tape-covered paperback novel that I don't mind trashing. I also have a small notebook and pen for scribbling down ideas that come to me while sitting in the tub. For example, the other day I realized how complex something as basic as slippers can be. In Japan, shoes are removed at the front door in all homes and many businesses (including J-List), and slippers are worn while indoors. When you visit a Japanese family at home, they'll usually put out a pair of slippers for you to use, which can be problematic when since only Ewoks could wear the tiny things comfortably. Thus, every foreigner living in Japan must choose what kind of relationship he will have with Japanese slippers -- will he politely accept them, or refuse and wear his socks, knowing that he's breaking a minor social rule? Incidentally, did you know that the modern concept of slippers is actually a Japanese invention? Back in the early Meiji Period, when Westerners would visit a Japanese home they'd walk right in without taking their shoes off. So in 1907 (or 1876, according to another theory), a shoemaker named Risaburo Tokuno came up with an "outer shoe" that covered the dirty boots of foreigners, keeping the house clean. These supposedly evolved into the modern concept of slippers as an indoor shoe.

The other day we found an old English textbook my wife had used in Junior High School. My kids and I delighted in reading her English homework from 20+ years ago, especially rejoicing in finding any errors she made at the time (we're kind of mean that way, I'm not sure why). One thing we noticed were little numbers written above words in her textbook. For example, in the sentence "Jane's arrival livened up the party," there was a 1 above "Jane's," a 3 above "arrival" and so on. My wife had been doing what a lot of Japanese do when learning English, being consciously aware of the number of syllables in correctly pronounced words. The Japanese language is based on syllables rather than individual sounds represented by letters, and as a result they unconsciously extend the limited repertoire of sounds from their own language into English, which is where the often thick Japanese accents come from. You and I know that the word "weekend" has two syllables, but to a Japanese who hasn't internalized the rules of English pronunciation, it sounds like "oo-EE-koo-EN-doh," a five-syllable word. If you're a native speaker of English, thank your parents next time you see them -- you don't know how fortunate you are to not have to go through the difficulties of learning English.


Pocky!


Pocky has gone from being a wonky snack that a few anime fans knew about to being a major representative of Japanese snack culture all around the world. The chocolate-covered pretzel stick, which gets its name from the pokki! sound you hear when you snap one in half, was first introduced in 1965 by the Glico Confectionery Company under the not-so-cool name of Chocoteck, where it was an instant hit. Glico was founded by Riichi Ezaki, who after the death of his infant son swore to improve the health of Japan's children by introducing sweets containing glycogen harvested from oysters, which is where the name Glico comes from. There are many different flavors of Pocky released each year, from traditional chocolate to half-bitter "Men's Pocky" to delicious variations like Pocky Crush (almond, cookies n' cream) to Green Tea Marble Pocky to the new Pocky Dessert, essentially a cake wrapped around a biscuit stick. The Glico corporation has declared that November 11 (11/11, which looks like four Pocky sticks lined up) to be International Pocky Day, and to help everyone celebrate, J-List is having a special sale this weekend, with an extra 5% taken off any purchase of ten or more boxes of Pocky (cases included). It's a great time to score some delicious Pocky!

Here are today's "really cool products" that I thought were especially noteworthy. Note: the J-List links below may be for adult products and should probably be considered "not safe for work" (a yes/no verification screen will be displayed to filter products from our mature site). To see all the J-List products, check out J-List or the JBOX.com updated products link. We also recommend watching our "new products" RSS feed.





Chocobo Plush -- Santa ver.
Chocobo Plush -- Santa, White Mage, Black Mage. From the Final Fantasy game Chocobo's Mysterious Dungeon, we've gotten in some great plush toys that feature the popular character Chocobo (whose name essentially means "chocolate ball"). These plush toys are great.
Gaiking ~ Mecha Action Series
Gaiking ~ Mecha Action Series. Here's a fantastic item, a super detailed toy of Gaiking, which can be posed in many ways. This was one of the original Shogun Warriors for all you old school folks out in J-List land.
Glico
Delicious New Japanese Snacks. Today's newly posted snack items include the refined and delicious "Meets Wine" series of Pretz pretzel snacks designed to go well with a late-night Merlot, Golden Apple Gummy, and Glico's popular Breo Mild Mints.
My Neighbor Totoro ~ Forest ~ Airtight Bento Box
My Neighbor Totoro ~ Forest ~ Airtight Bento Box. I've seen a lot of bento boxes, as you can imagine, but this is one of the coolest: simple 2-section design with a great image of Totoro on the front. Matching fork/spoon/chopstick case also available.
SADO ~ Traditional Japanese Tea Ceremony Set
SADO ~ Traditional Japanese Tea Ceremony Set. "Sado" is the Japanese art of Tea Ceremony, often called "chado" in front of foreigners because they think we can't learn proper Japanese. Here's a cool set to get you started on the Way of Tea.
Machine Robo Wedge
Machine Robo Perfect Guide. Wow, this artbook is filled -- filled, I say -- with picture after glorious picture of the best old robot toys of the 1980s, from Macross to Voltron to Transformers to everything in between, including minor stuff that toy fans will love to see. Includes a DVD, too.
Japan Atlas ~ A Bilingual Guide
Japan Atlas ~ A Bilingual Guide. We've restocked the very useful Bilingual Atlas of Japan, which features maps of the country with names in both kanji and Romanized, since it's all too common to find maps only in Japanese here.
NARUTO ~ Storms into another battle ~ B5 Note book
NARUTO ~ Storms into another battle ~ B5 Note book. Naruto fans, here's a really cool Japanese notebook for all your note-taking needs.
Revoltech Danboo ~ Yostsuba *Preorder*
Revoltech Danboo ~ Yostsuba *Preorder*. Yotsuba fans, here's a special item: the cool Danboo cardboard robot figure, which you can display in many ways.
Disgaea Figure Collection Basic Set of 6 *Preorder*
Disgaea Figure Collection Basic Set of 6 *Preorder*. Awesome set of figures from the popular game series Disgaea you can preorder now. I dig the shrine maiden with the spear, if that's what she's supposed to be.
Monokuro Boo Plush Pen
Monokuro Boo Plush Pen. Japanese pens are famous around the world for their precision and quality, and now they can be famous for being cute as well. This is a soft pen featuring plush Monokuro Boo ("monochrome oink") pigs at the top.
KIYA Katana Sword Steel Nail Clippers ~ Small
KIYA Katana Sword Steel Nail Clippers. Ever since we got these KIYA fingernail cutters made with the same steel the company makes samurai swords out of, I refuse to cut my fingernails with anything else. Back in stock!
MiMiDAS -- 21st Century Ear Cleaner
MiMiDAS -- 21st Century Ear Cleaner. Mimikaki are traditional Japanese ear cleaners, which make it easy to remove ear wax, plus they feel great. This is a space-age version that is incredibly good at getting that wax out. Back in stock now!
Real Blue -- Nao Nagasawa
Real Blue -- Nao Nagasawa. Now this is one truly beautiful woman, and this glossy hardcover photobook is filled with fantastic pictures of her.
Atashi ga Shiteageru ~ I'll Do It For You
Newly Posted Manga. We've gotten in some great new manga for "H" comic fans, including I'll Do It For You by Asano Ai and a super futanari with the innovative title of Read Me!
Moe Cos Nakadashi Special  -- Kotone Aizaki
Moe Cos Nakadashi Special -- Kotone Aizaki. The lovely Kotone Aizaki fulfills our anime cosplay dreams, performing as Sailor Venus, Asuka, Chun Li, Belldandy, and more. Man, this is the coolest anime cosplay crossover I've ever seen.


April 2, 2007

Differences in “maid culture” between Japan and Malaysia, thoughts on technology, and what makes a jar a jar?

First of all, we experienced some server trouble Sunday night for about an hour or so. I'd think of some witty April Fools Day joke to attribute the downtime to but it's already April 2nd in Nihon. Sorry for anyone trying to view the site during the trouble -- everything's back to normal now.

My family got back from Malaysia last week, bursting with news about everything that they'd seen there. They were in Kuala Lumpur, the country's largest city, and got to take in many beautiful sights, from mosques to bazaars to the famous Twin Towers. One cosmic truth about Nihonese boys is that they all seem to suffer from "beetle mania" and love to collect beetles as pets, and since Malaysia is a regular Beetle Mecca, my son had great fun hunting for his favorite specimens in the backyard. As is natural, there were cultural differences between my Nihonese family and the Malaysian friends they were staying with. For example, our friends had never seen snow and were interested in hearing what winter was like in Nihon. They were quite wealthy and employed several maids to clean their house, which caused some minor culture shock in my daughter, who wondered what the maids were doing cleaning. In the context of modern Nihon, a maid is an incredibly kawaii girl who wears a frilly uniform as she serves coffee and cake and generally provides eye candy for men to enjoy, and they have nothing to do with cleaning. I had to laugh at the differences in the two cultures.



Living with a foreign language every day as I do gives me large and small insights into how our brains are wired, including, for example, how we come to assign words to objects. What makes a jar a jar? In my own dialect of English, at least, it's any glass container that has a wide mouth opening. A bottle is similar, but must have a narrow opening. The Nihonese define vocabulary words in the same way, although there can sometimes be confusion when they import English words and assign slightly different meanings to them. To you or me, "juice" comes from various types of fruit, but in Nihonese the word is often used to refer to any canned beverage, even if it's tea. Milk comes from cows, but here the word miruku refers to powdered creamer for coffee. Rice in Nihonese is usually called gohan, unless you're eating at a Western-style restaurant, in which case it's called by its English name, raisu. Often some of the earliest words to be imported from English are shifted in meaning the most, since the Nihonese of the early Meiji Period had very little experience with foreign languages. Some of these older imported words include "rouge" (lipstick) and "manicure" (what they call nail polish), and even the venerable Ramune soda got its name because some Nihonese person of the era couldn't pronounce the word "lemonade." Sometimes two words become one, as in "curb" and "curve" which are phonetically impossible to distinguish in Nihonese anyway, while in other cases related concepts are split into two, as with clip-on earrings ("earring") and pierced earrings ("pierce"), treated as two separate concepts rather than sub-sets of the same group. And the word jar? In Nihonese it usually means "rice cooker" -- go figure.

Technology is always on the move, and no sooner do we get used to one type than it's been replaced by something else. When I first came to Nihon in 1991, it was very hip for young people to carry beepers, called "pocket bells" (ポケベル) and my students would constantly send messages to each other, usually during my class. At first the units could only receive numbers, so my students would send messages using cryptic phonetic codes -- for example, good morning ("ohayo") was rendered as 084, and "where are you now" ("ima doko?") came out as 10105. Yeah, I can't figure it out either. Then pocket bells that could display kana characters arrived, allowing more detailed messages to be sent, which really allowed communication to flourish. The ubiquitization of the cellular phone put paid to beepers a few years later, although paging services continued to be operated for customers in specific industries where they were still being used. Last week NTT announced that they were ending their paging service, which brings the pocket bell era to a close. Considering how quickly other technologies seem to be fading -- I'm sure modems and CRT monitors will look really awesome and retro in another decade or two -- I wonder what the future holds for all of us?

(Ha, I just realized that the word Pocket Monster is a reference to the term Pocket Bell.)

Remember that J-List stocks thousands of wonderful items from Nihon, including bento boxes, cute interactive electronic toys, tools to help you study Nihonese, awesome ways to bring a touch of Nihon to your personal space, and much more. There are many great ways to browse our extensive selection of products, including with the "3 day" link on the front page that shows you items added or updated in the last 3 days; the alternate "view all products" link, which shows all J-List products in newest-to-oldest order, and for slower connections, our handy "tree display" mode. Remember that we've recently added a Wish List feature, making it easy for you to add items to the list that you can either use as a reminder of items you want to check out later, or else you can make it a public list and share it with others.

Here are today's "really awesome products" that I thought were especially noteworthy. Note: the J-List links below may be for adult products and should probably be considered "NWS" (a yes/no verification screen will be displayed to filter products from our mature site). To see all the J-List products, check out J-List or the JBOX.com updated products link.

Yui Shop Yellow
Yui Shop Yellow. Wow! Yui Toshiki's art is incredible, and we're glad to have the latest Yui Shop in stock.
Mikuru Asahina *Waitress version* ~ Suzumiya Haruhi no Yuutsu
Mikuru Asahina *Waitress version* ~ Suzumiya Haruhi no Yuutsu. This Mikuru is in stock, ready for you to buy. We tried to order 32 of them and only got 3 sent to us from the distributor, so I think this will not last too long. (In fact one sold while I was updating the blog)
O Ha Tsu -- Minori Hatsune
O Ha Tsu -- Minori Hatsune. Fabulous H-cup Nihonese idol in her first photobook.
Kera Dec. 2006 vol.101
Kera Dec. 2006 vol.101. Kera is the new #1 magazine for fans of Harajuku fashion and gothic lolita cosplay. Get this rare single issue now.
Zenra Mixed Bathing - Could you Enter a Hot Spring Bath wearing Nothing? in Isawa
Zenra Mixed Bathing - Could you Enter a Hot Spring Bath wearing Nothing? in Isawa. The Zenra series is always popular. Here's the latest one, in which girls are asked to go into the men's bath.
Exchanging Bodies Nakadashi Sex -- Tsugumi Nagasawa
Exchanging Bodies Nakadashi Sex -- Tsugumi Nagasawa. Tsugumi-chan changes bodies with a man accidentally in a bold new release from SOD.
Mikuru Asahina ~ Nurse Costume (White Color) -- Suzumiya Haruhi no Yuutsu *Preorder*
Mikuru Asahina ~ Nurse Costume (White Color) -- Suzumiya Haruhi no Yuutsu *Preorder*. This is the really hard to find Mikuru figure that's coming in stock in June. Get yours now!
Dungeon Crusaderz
Dungeon Crusaderz. Amazing fantsy "H" comic in the AD&D style.
Nyan Nyan Nyanko ~ Nyanko Cafe no Maki
Nyan Nyan Nyanko ~ Nyanko Cafe no Maki. The official book of Nyanko cuteness, from San-X.
Works SCAJI illustrations - SCA-ji
Works SCAJI illustrations - SCA-ji. Gorgeous artbook from artist SCAJI, if that's how you write his name in English.
JAPAN ~ Mini Encyclopedia of Nihon
JAPAN ~ Mini Encyclopedia of Nihon. Learn a lot about Nihon through this mini-encyclopedia.
Hello Kitty Gothic Heart ~ Citizen Watch
Hello Kitty Gothic Heart ~ Citizen Watch. We've got some nice Hello Kitty watches on the site, with Gothic Lolita styling.
Complete Kendo
Complete Kendo. Learn lots about Kendo from this new book.
Pull-Dash Petit Tachikoma Racer
Pull-Dash Petit Tachikoma Racer. This is awesome! A Tachikoma racer that you can zoom anywhere. I have to get one of these for myself.
Negima Figuremate *School Version* Full Set (Set of 6)
Negima Figuremate *School Version* Full Set (Set of 6). Fun new Negima toy series on the site.
Uki Uki Island ~ Sunshine Buddies Style
Uki Uki Island ~ Sunshine Buddies Style. Cute little monkeys relieve your stress through solar power.
Naruto Nurie Coloring
Naruto Nurie Coloring. Naruto coloring book, awesome!
Village of Bamboo Shoot Eraser (Box of 5 Bamboo Shoot Mini Erasers)
Village of Bamboo Shoot Eraser (Box of 5 Bamboo Shoot Mini Erasers). Nihonese snacks are so popular that they're making other products featuring their images, including erasers, rulers and more. Fun stuff.
Totoro Music Box -- Acorn Festival - Dondoko Matsuri
Totoro Music Box -- Acorn Festival - Dondoko Matsuri. We have new Totoro music boxes today, beautiful ceramic ones that play Totoro music (naturally).



And now for some random pics that I hopefully haven't posted yet. Do you hate caterpillars? For some reason they are the most detested insect in all Nihon -- they're known as Kemushi or "hair bugs" in Nihonese. This is one I happened to save from being squashed in front of a store.



Ah, things I love about Nihon. This is the current Momi Momi chair line.



Keep your "naisu badii" (nice body) with one of these, a Joba horse riding simulator.



It can also help your golf swing, according to this.



At our place in Karuizawa we were bestoyed a great honor -- a pigeon used our balcony for its nest. Here it is with its new babies.

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