Tag Archives: japan

Linksday, November 18

Debbie says:

Here’s this week’s assortment of interesting tidbits:

napkin held over mouth shows closed lips

It’s amazing what we will do–and what corporations will enable–to suit our cultural expectations.

Looking to make life a little bit easier for their female clientele, the Japanese chain Freshness Burger launched the “Liberation Wrapper” to mask a woman’s mouth while eating. With this new burger packaging, which features a closed-mouth smile, women could now get the mouthful they so desired without the fear of public disapproval. Since switching up their wrappers, Freshness Burger has seen a 213% increase among women ordering their biggest patty.

Not everyone realizes Time and other weekly news magazines use different covers in the U.S. and around the world. Last week, ours had a fat joke about Chris Christie; the rest of the world got a cover referring to the article on the “gods of food” who, in keeping with at least conventional Christian concepts of gods, are all male. Melissa McEwen has something to say:

The problem here isn’t that [David] Chang is getting accolades, it’s that women who are equally talented aren’t sharing in the spotlight. Time can throw around words like “reputation” and “influence” all it likes, but the bottom line is that the media (and the culinary industry) doesn’t give women the same space to goof off as it does men. Women have to be serious about their talents, lest folks dismiss them as unskilled. Of course, behaving professionally is also likely to get a woman labelled as an icy bitch who isn’t a team player. All of which plays into the whole “boys club” dynamic that Time claims to be merely chronicling.

McEwen also name checks Alice Waters, who is from our own back yard and should never be left out of any great chefs article.

http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2013/11/14/doing-gender-with-wallets-and-purses/

The only thing that makes this 35-year-old virgin story worth a link is Laurie’s hilarious comment that whatever Amanda McCracken and Bill Clinton might do together, they’d both agree that it wasn’t “sex.”

We may be huge proponents of nude photographs, but we are also fond of consent. Apparently, for about thirty years, the Ivy League colleges took a different view.

Between the 1940s and the 1970s, … Harvard, Yale, Wellesley College, Vassar as well as Brown University, were among the elite American colleges that asked all the young men and women enrolled in their first year, to pose nude. Thousands and thousands of pictures were taken of students, including such notable names such as George Bush, Diane Sawyer, Meryl Streep and Hillary Rodham Clinton.

The unusual photo sessions were part of a larger project run by … William Herbert Sheldon, who conducted them in co-operation with the universities. While the general idea was that the photos were meant for the use of studying scoliosis, rickets and other posture-related deficiencies, it’s believed they were actually being used to research something rather more sinister. Strong evidence in Sheldon’s classified written material has shown that the researcher was using Ivy League freshmen students to study the correlation between a person’s body shape and their intelligence.

Aside from the complete lack of written consent (and the dubious consent of doing this when your place in college probably depended on it), I can’t even start about body shape, intelligence, presumptions of intelligence based on Ivy League school admittance and success, and more. Not, of course, to mention either class or race.

Thanks to jaylake for the burger napkin, and oursin for the Ivy League nudes.

Korean Sex Slave Sculpture Confronts Japan

Laurie says:

Many of the feminists I’ve worked with in Japan have been doing activist work for years with Korean feminists on the issue of the World War II Korean sex slaves. (The Japanese called them comfort women.)) So I learned from them a lot more about the horrors that were perpetuated on these women. The link is to the Wikipedia article. It’s worth reading all of it. The issue was originally raised in Korea by the Korean Women’s Movement.

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Quotes are from the New York Times

SEOUL, South Korea — The unsmiling teenage girl in traditional Korean dress sits in a chair, her feet bare, her hands on her lap, her eyes fixed on the Japanese Embassy across a narrow street in central Seoul. Within a day, the life-size bronze statue had become the focal point of a simmering diplomatic dispute as President Lee Myung-bak prepared to visit Tokyo this weekend.

The statue, named the Peace Monument, was financed with citizens’ donations and installed Wednesday, when five women in their 80s and 90s, who were among thousands forced into sexual slavery for the Japanese military during World War II, protested in front of the embassy, joined by their supporters. Such protests have been held weekly for almost 20 years.

For them and for many other Koreans, the statue — placed so that Japanese diplomats see it as they leave their embassy — carries a clear message: Japan should acknowledge what it did to as many as 200,000 Asian women, mostly Koreans, who historians say were forced or lured into working as prostitutes at frontline brothels for Japanese soldiers.

The Japanese government’s main spokesman, the chief cabinet secretary Osamu Fujimura, called the installation of the statue “extremely regrettable” and said that his government would ask that it be removed….South Korea made it clear that it had no intention of forcing the protesters to remove the statue.

..“The victims are over 80 years old and passing away, and the government is not in a position to tell them to remove the statue,” said Cho Byung-jae, a spokesman for South Korea’s Foreign Ministry. “Rather than insisting on the removal of the statue, the Japanese government should seriously ask itself why these victims have held their weekly rallies for 20 years, never missing a week, and whether it really cannot find a way to restore the honor these woman so earnestly want.”

A handful of elderly victims and their supporters — whose numbers have varied from a dozen to a few hundred — have rallied in front of the Japanese Embassy each Wednesday since Jan. 8, 1992.

The issue of “comfort women,” … is among the most emotional disputes stemming from Japan’s colonial rule of Korea from 1910 to 1945. Japanese officials have apologized but insist that the issue was settled in the 1965 treaty that normalized relations between the two countries.

In 1995, Japan offered to set up a $1 billion fund for the victims. But the women rejected this plan, because the money would have come from private donations, not from the government. What they want is a formal apology and an acknowledgment of legal responsibility from the Japanese government and reparations for the individual women for their suffering.

During a two-day trip to Tokyo that starts on Saturday, Mr. Lee plans to raise the issue of compensation for former sex slaves with Prime Minister Yoshiko Noda …

The Japanese government, courts and particularly the conservative LDP party have resisted any legal responsibility for what happened to these women. (There have been limited _very_ carefully worded apologies over the years that still deny legal responsibility.)

Time is running out. In the 1990s, there were 234 Korean women willing to break decades of silence on their history as sex slaves. Now only 63 remain.

And clearly this is an example of the political power art can have.