Wishlist Wednesday, (but more like Thursday or Friday): Shutting Out The Sun - Michael Zielenziger
On Wednesday, Pablo loaned CanadaBoy a copy of Shutting Out The Sun: How Japan Created Its Own Lost Generation. My bookish reflexes must have been out of whack that day or I would've pounced on it first. Ever since reading in Party Of One about the hikikomori, the young Japanese people who completely withdraw from all aspects of social life, I've been interested in learning more about them.
In writing Shutting Out The Sun, author Michael Zielenziger, a journalist who has lived in Japan for several years interviewed several hikikomori and their families and also discussed how the weak economic climate and the rigidity of the older generation's tradition-bound way of doing things have caused millions of young people in Japan to just throw up their hands and say in effect, "What the hell; what's the use?"
As far as being bound to the Confucian way of thinking, and the insane pressure put on young people from their earliest years to study and succeed, Korea and Japan are very much alike. I would almost be willing to wager that the hikikomori syndrome exists to some extent in Korea as well. These young people are considered mentally ill by the general public, but on some levels, hikikomori seems an inevitable and almost reasonable response to a society that is reluctant to change, even when it would benefit the younger generation.
I hope to wrest Shutting Out The Sun from CanadaBoy's grip sometime soon and learn more about this phenomenon. I also hope that as a westerner, Zielenziger is able to provide a balanced and unbiased view of Japanese society and its problems.
3 comments:
Oh, that sounds just awful. Kidding, kidding. I was going to say, "Wow, I'll have to add that one to my wish list," as always, and then I decided I was tired of hearing myself repeat the same old thing. So, pounce on Canada Boy, pry it from his hands and let us know what you think.
I may have to make a raid on CanadaBoy's apartment. I also want to borrow a nonfiction John Grisham book called The Innocent Man from him. The crime and its aftermath took place in Oklahoma, where I lived for so many years.
Oh, really? I don't know that I was aware the crime in that book took place in Oklahoma. Hmm. You know, fellow former Oklahoman, here. I've bypassed it but I might have to reconsider. Darn. Would you quit that? :)
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