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.