Showing posts with label musings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label musings. Show all posts

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Bloggers block

As you may have noticed, there's been a long stretch, here and over at SPO, without posts and I've finally figured out what it is that's causing the block:  my commute.

All of my musing is occurring while on the road, and by the time I'm some place where I can log in, it's gone.

It's pretty annoying, too, as I've got to do this for work, and even that's getting sparse.

Monday, May 30, 2011

On revenge, a tsunami, and the distance between here and there

Over the recent long weekend, I discovered the Japanese revenge flick Hard Revenge, Milly1, which is set (from what I can tell) in a semi-post-apocalyptic Yokohama. In the prologue for the movie the audience is told that Tokyo has been consumed by desert, while Yokohama remains green, which presents a problem.

For those of you not familiar with the Greater Tokyo Area, I'll point out that the distance between Yokohama and Metropolitan Tokyo is shorter than the distance between Hamilton and Toronto, or between Seattle and Tacoma, and is about the same distance as Queens is from Staten Island. 

So, in other words, the desertification of Tokyo would have a serious effect on the Yokohama area.

From this, I'm reminded of the tsunami of 2011, where the epicenter of the original quake was closer to Tokyo than Ottawa is to Toronto, and the entirety of Honshu, the main island of the Japanese archipelago, is roughly the distance between Windsor and Quebec City. Honshu is also the home of the majority of Japan's population, which is roughly 128 million people, with a population density of about 377 people per km2 . For comparison, Canada's population is roughly 34.5 million, with about 3.4 people per km2, giving us around 1% of the population density of Japan. 

These thoughts got me wondering what the definition of space is in Japan, and how the average Japanese (as a nation, not ethnicity) person perceives distance when everything is so (comparatively) close, including your neighbour.

The movie, assuming that there is a somewhat down-to-earth representation of Japanese perception involved (which, admittedly, might be a stretch considering that it's a low-budget exploitation flick), seems to illustrate a disconnect involving the perception of distance and how that maps (literally) to the rest of the world. In makes me wonder if centuries of isolation, and decades of urban sprawl, have defined a different perception of how big the world is, and how much space there is out there between places.

I imagine that a country the size of Canada, with the distance between places, and the focus on 'space' is quite alien to someone who's never left the archipelago.  The reverse of this is how the average Canadian would react to the ability to travel from coast to coast on a train in a couple of hours.

Myself, I've got a thing about personal space, and I suspect that I would not do well with the population density in Japan, at least on Honshu.  I think I'd probably even have troubles on Hokkaido, the northern-most island, with its lower density and, well, earthquakes.

So, I think I need to fire off an email to my friend in Tokyo about this, as it's got me wondering.

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1 The comma is not a typo.