Blog Love: Onsen Meijin

I was looking around for some new blogs to look at, and I hadn’t yet discovered Onsen Meijin. A recent poster to my own blog pointed out that “meijin” (名人) means master, and has nothing directly to do with fame/ reputation. Well, kanji can have more than one meaning in practice; derived meanings are as old as Chinese itself.

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Sushi, Diabetes and Frivolous Lawsuits

Overreach

Here in the LA Times we have a story about a man with Diabetes who refused to eat the rice in an “all the sushi you can eat” special offer at a sushi restaurant, wanting only the fish. I think the kicker here is that the chef kindly offered to prepare him sashimi specifically, but the customer dramatically refused – and then sued for “over $4000.” What an ass.

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Random Oriental Wisdom, 2-24-11

Wisdom Comes In Various Forms

The enemy of my enemy is my cannon fodder. – Random blog

Seen in the context of a review of Star Driver episode 20, here. I found it quite amusing… and of real application in strategy games. A surprising amount of wisdom in this small quote, honestly…

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Japanese: Places, Names, Fame and Renown

A Rose By Any Other Name

What’s in a name? Today’s subject isn’t any particular place name; it is a term used for famous places as described in an essay on viewing Japanese prints, like ukiyo-e. There is, after all, a long and rich tradition of Japanese wood block printed graphic art of interesting place, such as in the Edo (modern Tokyo) area.

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Origami

折り紙

The word “origami” is formed of the verb 折る (oru), in an infinitive form, and (kami), turned to “gami” as the second part of a compound word. I maintain that such pronunciation changes exist simply to make it easier to say, i.e. less of a tongue-twister. Thus, origami quite literally reads like folding paper. As in, the act of folding paper, not paper for folding in and if itself.

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On Wars and Japanese Emperors

Losing The Plot

So, I was reading another article in the Japan Times, this time on a playwright who is doing a play that examines the origin myth of the Japanese imperial line (which would be the Yamato line, for those keeping track). The article is titled, Playwright Noda asks, “What is a Japanese?” We should read this as in 日本人 (nihonjin, a Japanese person).

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On Japanese Popular Culture

Rejecting A Restrictive View

In reading an article in the Japan Times about popular culture in Japan, the article takes a position that is overtly or covertly taken by many purported conveyors of wisdom about Japan: the position that popular culture didn’t really exist until 400 years ago, when Izumo no Okuni single-handedly invented it.

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Extra! Extra! Gundam Exia Survives Gundam 00 Season 2

“Sighted” Via Twitter

Some fans of Gundam 00 had wondered if Gundam Exia had even survived the end of the second season in some form, or if it had been completely destroyed, never to be utilized again in any way.

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A Few Japan-Related Stories

A Little Food for Thought

Here’s a couple of stories I took note of.

International travel to (and from) Tokyo just got quicker and funkier

10 best places for plum blossoms in Japan

‘You’re perfect just the way you are,’ says zen movie

All very self-explanatory.

I haven’t had a chance to blog properly in recent days, so this helps make up for things a little. Thank you for your support. – J

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See, The Sushi Is The Rice…

A lot of people think that “sushi” is raw fish. Sushi refers to the rice; the sliced raw fish is sashimi. Without that little fact, the content at this link (which is from the Associated Press) wouldn’t make much sense.

Long story short, a new type of sushi bar is attracting a female clientelle in Tokyo: one offering slices and cuts of raw meat other than fish, such as beef, chicken, pork, deer, and horse. The rice is being sold with balsamic vinegar to offset the different meat better than the usual regular variety.

Now, I do see a rather obvious problem. I can understand raw fish of various sorts being entirely sanitary, but raw pork…? Isn’t that dangerous, since pigs are just close enough to humans (in body temp and so on) for a lot of bugs to be able to make the species jump? Well, I’m not their meat inspector, so I’m not going to speculate.

All I know for sure is that it’s an excellent opportunity to underline how the fish is not the sushi, so this, too, is sushi, without any abuse of language. I just don’t intend to vouch for it being good sushi, but someone likes it.

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