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Friday, 24 November 2006
Rorita

Rost in tlansration. From The Times:

The appropriation of certain English words by foreign cultures can produce odd misunderstandings. But there can be few more bizarre than the interpretation of the term “Lolita” among young Japanese women. Tokyo’s “Gothic Lolitas” exhibit a bizarre style of dress that applies a grungy twist (lots of black eyeliner and pouting) to a “Lolita” aesthetic. The result is a tad disturbing, especially for readers familiar with Nabokov. The girls are delighted with their look, as was one of the organisers of a gathering of 1,500 “GothLolis” in Tokyo.

 
Naoki Matsumara, editor of the gothic Lolita magazine Kora, tried to explain the appeal: “Gothic fashion represents coolness in the darkness. That’s why these girls mixed Lolita fashion into it, so they can look cool and pretty.” Sorry, still confused.

The Japanese are funny when they are just being Japanese, but they are even funnier when they try to be a bit un-Japanese. About a year ago a bizarre list of Japanese neologisms relating to single women was published in The Times. They make Ally MacBeal, the profoundly irritating, cadaverous TV "lawyer", who needs a good slap and a bacon sandwich, seem quite feisty. Choice examples for Arry MacBear are:

Kakobijin Literally, past beauty. Describes the sort of woman who talks incessantly about how she would have been thought of as a stunner if she had lived in a different era, when men’s tastes in women were different.

Ame-unication The act of offering sweets to another woman in the hope of striking up a conversation and breaking the loneliness of single life

Rakudaraifu Literally, camel life. Applied to single women who spend much of their weekends cooking food and deep-freezing it so that it can be reheated in a hurry when they return from work late

Henkyoryugaku Literally, study abroad in the wild. Describes young women who in their twenties and thirties rebel against social norms and travel abroad to devote time to an eccentric art form, such as Balinese dancing

Toirebijutsukan Literally, toilet museum. The trend whereby young women moving into an apartment alone for the first time will go to extreme lengths to decorate their lavatory, scent it with perfume and stock it with interesting literature

And the greatest of these is toirebijutsukan.

Posted on 6:22 AM by Mary Jackson
Comments
24 Nov 2006
Hugh Fitzgerald
"chokuegambo describes the wish that there were more designer-brand shops on a given street..."

-- from the earlier article in The Times on new terms in the Japanese (female) lexicon

That's perfectly sensible. Whether you are a Japanese girl (hence ready and willing to pay full price) or an American of any kind (hence unready and unwilling to accept anything but a big bargain), you need to compare and contrast these brand-names, these griffes.

Else what are the outlets at Kittery, Maine for?

As for "kakobijin" a word describinig the fond belief that one possesses a beauty corresponding to the ideas of beauty of an earlier age, and earlier standards of taste, surely that is not limited to Japanese. The self-described "Rubenesque" beauty of those with curvature of the everything, and the "Modigliani-esque" beauty for those closer to the straight line and the bulimic, or the "pre-Raphaelite" unearthly beauty of the girl who in the Personal Ads tells a potential mate how much she enjoys taking long walks on the beach, Paris, Umbria, ski lodges, gourmet meals at Bouley's or just whipped up at home for a quiet dinner for two, so there's more time for cuddling -- well, that "pre-Raphaelite" epithet is standard, vieux jeu, not limited to the Land of the Rising Sun. One has not yet seen a personals ad in which the female writer describes herself as "Hottentot-venusesque," but it's coming.

And for the men, no doubt, something similar is at work: "Lascaux-like in my fierce, almost elemental, primitivism" or "I'm told my eyes glitter with the fanaticism of an El Greco saint" and so on.

Whatever you can think of, if it hasn't happened yet, it will.

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