Wednesday, November 2, 2011

今和次郎 採集講義




Kon Wajiro (1888-1973) was born in Hirosaki, Aomori Prefecture. He is known as the founder of "Modernology," a school of thought involving the gathering (i.e. observation and recording) and analysis of data regarding the changes in the cityscape and people of Tokyo as it rapidly developed into a metropolis in the early Showa period (1926-1989). He also left behind valuable research in the study of minka, or traditional folk dwellings, which he began to show an interest in after participating in activities initiated by the Hakubokai, a group of minka researchers led by Kunio Yanagita, the father of Japanese native folkloristics.
Kon was also an architect and designer who painted makeshift barracks built along Tokyo's streets following the Great Kanto Earthquake in 1923; built experimental housing to make life easier for people living in areas with heavy snowfalls; and designed cooperative workplaces for villages. Following World War II, he introduced new fields of academia such as Lifestyle Studies and Clothing Research that focused on aspects of everyday lives. Kon's interest in a number of different fields was rooted in his own way of life: traveling between cities and villages to observe a wide range of lifestyles with an open mind, with the ultimate goal of working with others to create new schemes of life best suited to adapt to future trends.
This first-ever comprehensive retrospective of Kon Wajiro introduces his unique artistic career through sketches, photographs, designs, architectural drawings, and other materials meticulously selected from the vast Kon Wajiro Collection housed in the Kogakuin University Library, as well as models and dramatic re-enactments created exclusively for this exhibition.

source

Japanese society : mariage and family life

Sexe & mariage : « les gens ont envie de vivre » au Japon

Les "mariages sans sexe", problème de santé publique au Japon

The decline of Asian marriage Asia's lonely hearts

'Sexlessness' wrecks marriages, threatens nation's future

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Monday, September 26, 2011

Collateral damage

A Tokyo, quelque part au fond d'un parc, il existe un sanctuaire où les gardiens viennent demander pardon à l'âme des corbeaux qu'ils ont éradiqués à la demande de la ville.
Où est le sanctuaire des parapluies meurtris et abandonnés par leur propriétaire sans pitié après le typhon?

Lullaby for grownups

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Apocalypse Now

Outside there is a tremendous typhoon sweeping across Tokyo.
I am supposed to go to a classical concert tonight, but I don't think if I can make it.
Also what worries me most is that I think I left home with the window slightly open this morning. I dread the moment when I get home and find the tatami soaking wet. It will be a first for me after all these years.
Not to mention my bicycle which I left downstairs by the building, I will probably find that on the other side of town when all this is over.
Oh anyway, as long as everybody is safe and sound. The most funny thing is that people seem to be running errands as usual, acting as if nothing was going on. People walking in the street with their umbrellas being blown upside down and sometimes away.

But as they say, "keep calm and carry on" !

On attend ROKE

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/21_13.html

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Brèves japonaises (2)

Je me disais qu'ouvrir la fenêtre quand il fait 23 degrés dehors, ça pourrait changer un peu de la clim. Ah oui, mais elle me dit qu'il y a peur-être de la radioactivité dans l'air.
C'est bien connu, la clim comme filtre anti-nucléaire, y a pas mieux !

Brèves japonaises (1)

Connaissez-vous le pays dans lequel on se voit refuser une table parce qu'on ne fume pas ? Welcome to Tokyo !