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Current
Issue: KJ #69

Cover
photo of raft ice by Shimizu Takeo (click to enlarge)
Until the magazine is laid out, we never fully grasp what kind of connections
might exist between its no longer separate parts.
Ice and pinhole photography; subaquatic future tourism; negatives, a
book of shadows; phototherapy; China, Taiwan, Laos; lands ravaged in
wartime and in peace. Genghis Khan, miniature landscapes. What alchemy
unfolds?
Sunbursts, fission, flashes of illumination, Rumi's "lighted clarity,"
the sun in the market; silver bombers reflecting a city ablaze at night;
snow streams like comet tails off Karakorum peaks; the Olympics; the
Big Rainbow.
Read on....
FULL
CONTENTS:
4 Pouring Light into Mombetsu: A Hokkaido Town Looks beyond Global
Warming
by John Einarsen
For most of its history a community of scallop harvesters,
fishermen, crabbers, miners, and dairy farmers, Mombetsu has recently
suffered, like so many rural communities in Japan, from depopulation.
The problem is made even worse by the decline in ice floe tourism. Recognizing
that the environment really is changing, townspeople have had to come
to terms with the situation. Some have seen the retreating ice as an opportunity
for a slower, more sustainable approach to community, and they seek to
promote Mombetsu as the “Slowest Town in Japan.”
10 Suzuka Yasu – Samsara
12 Ishihara Masumi – Connecting with healing spirit
16 Sato Tokihiro – Building a camera obscura out
of ice
Pinhole cameras are less about aiming a lens than
about placing a container, less about capturing an image than about gathering
one in. Pinholes are slow and exploratory by nature, their images dream-like
and poetic. They do not come off assembly lines (at least not until recently),
but are handmade, each one a unique expression of its maker. Pinhole “slowness”
entices its practitioners back to the present. All these qualities embody
a gentler, more spontaneous and respectful relationship to the world.
18 Shadow Diary
Photos by James Jack
16 On the Art of Shaanxi Shadow Play
by Edward A. Burger
Shadow play is a farmer’s art. By day, the
puppet-master, storyteller and their troupe work their family land like
any other peasants in Shaanxi Province. But as the sun begins its slow
descent towards night, something special happens. These farmers wash the
earth from their hands and pick up their lutes as virtuosos in one of
China’s most delicate and intricate performance arts. The quiet
village night becomes a living theater of love-struck maidens, fearless
warriors and righteous kings. And the shadows come out to play.
See also online feature interview
with Edward A. Burger
ENCOUNTERS
28 In the Valley of Lijiang – Or Giladi
Dr
Ho, a small mercurial man who appeared to be in his early eighties, shook
my hand and immediately burst into a monologue about his achievements.
Despite being suppressed by the authorities during the years of the Cultural
Revolution, he had carried on his work and cured many thousands of patients
from a variety of ailments, using locally sourced herbal medicines. His
crowning achievement was curing an American patient of leukemia, and as
he was telling me about it he pulled out a photocopy of an American pathology
lab report as proof that the patient had been actually cured.
30 Kashgar to Tashkurgan – Notes from Far West China
– Scott Ezell
We sit on the floor eating hand-made noodles, Mahoi’s
sister gives me a shy smile and an extra scoop of sauce, consisting of
goat meat, peppers, and pickled greens. She places coals from the stove
into a steel basin for heat; we sit in a circle with our food in our hands.
When the broadcast ends the radio lapses back to static. Mahoi turns it
off, and the only sound is the wind sharpening itself like a blade against
the corners of the hut..
POETRY
29 The Negative – Arthur Sze
33 Chinese Art and Greek Art – Rumi (trans. Coleman
Barks)
50 The Sun in the Marketplace – Yan Li (trans.
Zhang Er & Leo Schwarz)
50 Thanks for That – Yan Li (trans. Dennis Mair)
50 A Poem on Things – Zhang Di (Trans Jeanne Hong
Zang)
82 The Firebombing of Tokyo – Tony Barnstone
35 Bontei
– Marc P. Keane
36 The Central Question – Paul Kahn
How the Mongols managed to take over China and Korea,
the Middle East up to the borders of Syria and Egypt, and what is today
known as Russia, this is not an easy question to answer. I do not propose
to even try. Perhaps the more constructive question, the one we should
really ask ourselves today is why it is so difficult to understand?
I would propose that the main reason is that the Mongols are identified
with the stereotype of the Barbarians. Barbarians in the Mediterranean
tradition are, tautologically speaking, invaders without culture who destroy
civilization. In the modern world, civilization destroys less sophisticated,
less advanced cultures.
CONVERSATION
38 Re-Branding
China: Wang Min and the Beijing Image
When Wang
Min refers to his current project as “the biggest design job in
the world,” he’s not joking. His responsibility as “Director
of Image and the Look” of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games includes
overseeing planning and coordination of every detail of its visual appearance,
from the overall color design palette to individual sports pictograms,
street banners, and even the Olympic medals themselves. Worldwide, the
audience for this huge event is estimated at 4.5 billion viewers.
FICTION
42 Tunnel of Love – Tze Ming Mok
It was the third time they’d met. Xiali was
still a government-accredited Three Gorges tour-guide, but now did
conveyor belt underwater tours through a small subaqueous village heritage
museum. Harry’s Mandarin had improved.
Loudhailers were eschewed in the acoustically sensitive tunnel, where
voices snapped clean and reassuringly close, like the rustle of hospital
sheets. Sections of the moving belt made subtle clunks. Xiali’s
voice in English was charming and upturned.
“Now here we are at Santou village, famous for being an educated,
curative village of apothecaries, dentists, acupuncturists and hairdressers
for the local farmers. See the quaint drawers in this shopfront, just
behind that school of fish.”
REALIZATIONS
52 Land and Money – William Stimson
“Where I’d like to go,” I said,
“is to your mother’s rice paddy and to your grandmother’s
village. And maybe also to see your father’s factory.” I didn’t
want to be a tourist. I wanted to see the real Taiwan.
I’d asked over and over to see those places. There was something
about Taiwan that still didn’t seem quite right to me. I needed
to fit this place I’d come to somehow with the one I thought I was
coming to. I had this notion that I could understand Shuyuan’s family
and her people if I could just spend some time at her mother’s rice
paddy.
58
Frontier Country
– Benjamin Hodgdon
... It is a reality that stands in stark contrast
to the image of Laos touted by the tour books: the “Shangri-La”
of Southeast Asia, the new hip destination for a growing number of eco-chic
travelers drawn to Laos as an unspoiled natural wonder, where the “real
Asia” can be experienced. Beyond the high-end ecotourism retreats,
in frontier country, logging and the timber trade are stripping countless
villages of their most valuable resource – the timber removed from
Khampone’s village last year alone was worth upwards of half a million
dollars – while enriching a small clique of the Lao political elite
and Vietnamese sawmillers, all in the name of economic development.
52 IN TRANSLATION
Troopers’ Inn – Takenishi Hiroko, trans.
Lawrence Rogers
The maid, fuming, was at the sink washing dishes
and talking to herself.
“That fool officer! Why didn’t he let his men eat? We made
a special effort for them! An officer who can’t feel for his men
can’t be a decent leader!”
She went on vilifying the officer. Hisashi’s mother sensed the maid’s
complaints were on the mark. She began to think that the officer had not
even considered their feelings, let alone what his men felt, but then
she reconsidered. No, she decided, she couldn’t expect it to not
have been a trial for him as well. How much easier it would have been
to have given the rice cakes to his men. Putting it in that light, she
felt sorry for the officer as well, not just his men.
72 The Barter – Ho Anh Thai (trans. Ho Anh Thai
& Wayne Karlin)
While I was studying in India, I had a German classmate
with whom I also shared a room in the hostel. In a word, we were roommates.
The first day we met, he introduced himself with these words: “I
am Heinrich, from Bavaria, located in the south of Germany.”
I told him I had read the work of the German poet Heinrich Heine, his
namesake. He shrugged—nowadays, he said, everyone was writing poetry.
I abandoned nineteenth century German literature and mentioned Heinrich
Boll and Erich Maria Remarque. He looked at me suspiciously, as if I were
trying to trap him into admitting some association with criminals wanted
by Interpol.
See also online feature "The
Man who Believed in Fairy Tales" by Ho Anh Thai
76 CONVERSATION
Zen at War: The Buddhist Enablement of Japanese Militarism
Kathy Arlyn Sokol talks with Brian Daizen Victoria
We tend to believe that in certain doctrines –
for example, the doctrine of Jihad in Islam – that if those people
would just get rid of Jihad and the idea of Jihad, then Islam wouldn’t
be so bad. But what I’ve tried to show is that unless we also explore
the economic pressures, political pressures, the sociological pressures,
the psychological pressures, and all of those various aspects, then we
are not going to understand what it is that’s going on that leads
all religions, at one time or another, to sacralize violence.
82
REVIEWS
A History of Japanese Body-Suit Tattooing, Mark Posden &
Marco Bratt, reviewed by Dustin Leavitt
Haiku Humor, Wit and Folly in Japanese Poems and Prints, Stephen
Addisswith Fumuko Y. Yamamoto and Akira Y. Yamamoto, reviewed by William
J. Higginson
For Gods, Ghosts & Ancestors, Janet Lee Scott, reviewed by
Lauren W. Deutsch
Plastic Culture: How Japanese Toys Conquered the World, reviewed
by Eric Luong
JAPANAMERICA: How Japanese Pop Culture has Invaded the U.S.,
Roland Kelts, reviewed by Ken Rodgers
The Politics of Nanjing: An Impartial Investigation, Kitamura
Minoru (trans. By Hal Gold), reviewed by Russel Moses
Amongst White Clouds; Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter, ...and
Spring; Why Has Bodhidarma Left For the East?, reviewed by Lauren
W. Deutsch (See also online feature interview
with Edward A. Burger, director of Amongst White Clouds)
Women of the Way: Discovering 2,000 Years of Buddhist Wisdom,
Sallie Tisdale, reviewed by Lauren E. Bean
Losing Kei, Suzanne Kamata, reviewed by Colleen Shiels
The Magical Butterfly and Other Stories, Sherry Nakanishi, reviewed
by Justin Ellis
Shadow of the Silk Road, Colin Thubron, reviewed by James Dalglish
88 BLOGOLOGY
Making a Difference: Tales of an American Physical Therapist in
Vietnam
www.steadyfootsteps.org
98 RAMBLE
The Big Rainbow – Robert Brady
We behold full and long-term rainbows all the time
out here in the countryside, as compared to the couple of minutes of barely
distinguishable fragments of arc we used to see between buildings in the
city sometimes, already kind of faded and archaeological, like a suddenly
exposed artifact that disintegrates on contact with modern air, such as
that is, but these gateways of light we see arching from mountains to
Lake are real rainbows, wide ones, deep and full ones, all the way from
here to there, in the true meaning of those terms as used here in the
countryside...
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