News On Japan

As pandemic drags on, it's self-help time in Japan

Aug 27 (Nikkei) - Reader, heal thyself! In many a bookstore in Japan these days, that appears to be the message from publishers to consumers looking for summertime page-turners or browsers in search of popular titles about golf, computers and business-and-finance trends.

Summer arrived late in Japan this year following an unusually long and tedious rainy season, whose overcast days and unshakable dampness added to the sense of ukki (melancholy or gloom) provoked by the spread of the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19. But Japanese bibliophiles have been emerging after a long, virus-induced stay-at-home period, looking for interesting books for pleasure, study or work-related research.

In these virus-haunted times, visitors to Japanese bookstores will find a summer mix of romantic novels by young writers, treatises predicting future trends by management and financial gurus, and fantasy-fueled travel journals (if one cannot escape, thanks to the pandemic, at least one can take off vicariously for New York, Paris or Rome). This year, biographies of Yuriko Koike, the recently re-elected governor of Tokyo, who is one of Japan's most high-profile politicians, have also appeared.

At the same time, shelves in what some stores label their "raifu", or "life" sections, transliterating the original English word and using it to refer to lifestyle guides and self-improvement books, offer numerous titles that, for a foreign observer, hold a mirror up to current trends in Japanese society.

Given the specter of the ubiquitous and lethal coronavirus, this is probably not the best time for "The Courage to Be Disliked: How to Free Yourself, Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness," a self-improvement book with a peculiar theme and a downer of a title that was a big hit just a few years ago. Creating one's home should always involve more pleasure than toil, but in the current climate, even the ever-fastidious Marie Kondo's admonitions about decluttering -- tossing out possessions that do not bring their owners joy -- sound strict and stern.

Self-help and self-improvement books on display in the "Life" section of a bookstore in Tokyo, August 2020 (Photo by Edward M. Gómez)

Instead of tough-love tip sheets, Japanese readers seem to want ideas about the arts of feeling good and creating enjoyable lives -- and more confident, capable selves -- in preparation for their emergence, some fine, sunny day, from the angst-ridden pandemic. With this in mind, the psychologist Nobuyori Ooshima's "Book for Changing, Right Now, the Self That Cannot Be Tidied Up" offers, its cover declares, 25 techniques for getting one's act together, immediately and in a satisfying manner.

News On Japan
POPULAR NEWS

Typhoon No. 24 (Fung-shen) is strengthening over the South China Sea and is expected to make landfall in Vietnam later this week, according to forecasts. Satellite images on October 20th show extensive cloud coverage over the central South China Sea. After passing over the Philippines, Fung-shen temporarily weakened but is projected to intensify again as it continues westward through Tuesday.

Tokyo’s seas and rivers, once considered lawless backwaters beyond the reach of regular policing, are now under constant watch by a dedicated force known as the “water police,” specialists who patrol the capital’s waterways, chase down smugglers, stop reckless jet ski riders, and carry out dramatic rescue missions to save lives.

Kyoto’s world-famous Arashiyama district, a popular destination for both domestic and international tourists, is facing a growing problem of graffiti etched into the bamboo along its iconic “Bamboo Grove Path,” with more than 350 stalks now damaged — a practice that experts warn could eventually cause bamboo to weaken, fall, and even injure visitors.

Japan’s streaming industry is under growing pressure as foreign giants tighten their grip on the domestic market, with Netflix’s latest move to secure exclusive broadcast rights in Japan for every game of the World Baseball Classic next March highlighting the widening gap.

Investigators from the Immigration Services Agency conducted on-site inspections in Osaka on October 14th amid a surge in so-called 'paper companies' created by foreign nationals seeking residency.

MEDIA CHANNELS
         

MORE Society NEWS

The October issue of the long-established American lifestyle magazine Town & Country features Mako Komuro, the eldest daughter of the Akishino family, on the cover under the headline "Princess Ingognito," dedicating a six-page spread to Komuro and her husband Kei, exploring their life in the United States.

Police have arrested a former host and several associates for allegedly coercing female customers into sex work after exploiting their romantic feelings and saddling them with massive debts.

A violent attack early on October 20th in Ibaraki Town, Ibaraki Prefecture left one man dead and another injured after they were stabbed with what appeared to be a bladed weapon inside an apartment. Police are investigating the case as a murder.

A woman in her 40s suffered a serious injury after being trapped in a mechanical parking system in Tokyo’s Shinagawa Ward on October 19th.

A former pet shop owner convicted of repeatedly sexually assaulting several female employees and sentenced to 30 years in prison appealed his case at the Fukuoka High Court on October 14th, again claiming that the acts were consensual.

The relocation of Arimasu Tobiru, a distinctive architectural landmark on Hijirizaka in Tokyo’s Minato Ward, was carried out between August and October after nearly two decades of construction.

A Brazilian man has been arrested and indicted for smuggling cocaine into Japan by swallowing the drugs and concealing them inside his body.

Prosecutors have demanded the death penalty for a man accused of killing three family members and seriously injuring another with a crossbow in 2020 in Takarazuka, Hyogo Prefecture.