J-List is a wonderful toybox of things from Japan - come see
Every time you don't click over to J-List, God kills a kitten

The personal log of Peter Payne, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

"Haafu" (Half) Japanese, the Pinnacle of Cuteness

Wherever you're from in the world. there's a good chance that your blood contains contributions from different national groups -- maybe some German or Italian blood from this branch of the family, or perhaps a dash of Cherokee to keep things interesting. To people from the melting pot that is the United States, mixed ancestry is taken for granted, and it's quite common to talk about about where your ancestors came from with others. This is one discussion you probably won't hear in Japan, a very homogenous country where virtually everyone considers themselves to be of identical stock. The exception to this rule are individuals who are haafu, or half Japanese and half-Western, who exist in the special place between futsu (normal) Japanese and the incredible varieties of face, hair and body types seen in Westerners. To many people here, haafu seems to be the perfect blending of Japanese sensibilities and Western mystique, and there's a large group of "talents" on TV whose mixed blood helps them appeal to fans. These include popular TV announcer Crystal Takigawa, whose soft half-French appearance might subliminally lend credibility when reporting on international news; half-English JPOP singer Kaela Kimura, who got her break when she was chosen to appear in the "Have a break, have a Kit Kat" TV commercials; and of course the super-cute Leah Dizon, whose ancestry includes French, American, Chinese and Filipino. Perhaps the current pinnacle of haafu cuteness is actress Erika Sawajiri, the Algerian-French-Japanese star, who's incredible beauty has won her many fans.

7 Comments:

Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Must...resist...cute...eyes...

12:24 AM

 
Blogger timo said...

she is a beauty, withiut doubt.

4:21 AM

 
Blogger James said...

I'd have to agree. :D

8:55 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

She's starting to remind me of another woman I really like, Reiko Takashima, an actress who often plays wives of Yakuza.

10:09 AM

 
Blogger Tristan said...

I was under the impression that mixing japanese blood with other races was considered a negative, like diluting fine wine with water, I am half Japanese-Canadian and the other half is Spanish/Italian from Uruguay, I have always felt very ostracised from other nihonjin - canadians, I felt like my mixed ethnicity and western personality made me a complete gaijin to their viewpoint. It makes me happy to hear that it is now considered acceptable to be mixed blood in japan, I have always wanted to visit Japan but was always afraid that speaking only english and being mixed would make for a hostile experience.

3:24 AM

 
Blogger kumichan83 said...

tristan, actually haafu people are exoticized in japan. they are the beauty ideal for a lot of people. and like peter said, there are lots of mixed race people on japanese tv nowadays. of course in small town areas there is still some racism. i think it is hardest for half black half japanese people, although that is also starting to become somewhat accepted. there is a singer who is half black half korean named crystal kay in japan who is very famous now.

9:51 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

While I'm sure there are plenty of counter-examples, i.e. times when a Japanese of mixed ancestry was considered less useful, there is at least a large number of actresses, models and musicians who use their haafu-ness to build mystique and make great careers. It's probably not always a positive -- I'm sure there would be issues if you were a half-Japanese who looked 99% Japanese but couldn't speak the language, people wondering what was "wrong" with you, which isn't fair at all of course if you weren't born here. Yes, there is a "separate-ness" to being haafu, i.e. you might have to work a little harder to be accepted by the group (my son makes sure he can write kanji very well lest anyone think less of him for not being able to do what "normal" Japanese can do). There are some positives, though, is all I'm saying, thanks to the Japanese tendency to think that any Western blood is "better" than Japanese blood and thus haafu is a higher state of "kakko ii"-ness.

10:36 AM

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

 


,