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

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Michael Jackson, Japan and "The Way We Pretend Things to Be"

One of the invisible pillars of Japanese society is tatemae (tah-tay-MAH-eh), literally meaning façade but in actual use, "the way we pretend things are, even though we know they're not"; the word is usually paired with honne (HOHN-neh), which means the way things really are, or a person's real intentions. I learned about these concepts during my brief career as a city employee when I served as the Facilitator of Internationalization, doing things like translating documents for the mayor and helping out foreigners who couldn't speak Japanese. On the surface, I was in charge of coming up with new ways to serve the foreign community of our city, yet every suggestion I put forth to the bureaucracy was declined with a polite so desu ne, a phrase which literally means "yes, that's so" but which appears to carry the nuance of "forget it, silly gaijin," too. Of course, Japan isn't the only country to wear different faces for different situations. During the love-fest surrounding the death of King of Pop Michael Jackson by the media that did nothing but tear him down at every opportunity while he was alive, I'm reminded that America, too, has its tatemae and its honne at times. Anyway, Michael, thanks for all the fun memories over the years!

Michael Jackson was worshipped by his fans in Japan, who loved him pretty much unconditionally.

2 Comments:

OpenID inutaihanyou123 said...

You only realize what you've got till its gone. Vast majority i suspect, believed he'd always be around to be that caricature of what the media wanted him to be portrayed as in order to get views...surrounding the British interview and the allegations and the baby dangling thing...now that he's gone, and after the memorial, i don't think its so much two facedness on many people's parts(although there surely is such present) as much as it is, tearing down the caricature for many, and reinstalling the human behind it.

7:40 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Yes, what a shame he couldn't have had a more normal post-popularity existence. Maybe divert his energy to raising other talent as a producer as many have done. He was an awesome guy, totally defined the 80s for me (and a good chunk of the 70s now that I think about it).

3:42 AM

 

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