Monday, April 19, 2021

Fading sun

A lot has happened (and not happened). I want to start this back up again. The great theological epiphany I was looking for finally occurred (albeit not exactly in the way I thought it would). Maybe I'll elaborate on that later. I'm facing a bit of a time crunch with the end of the semester however, so this review of Shutting Out the Sun by Michael Zielenziger, which I had originally posted on Goodreads, will have to do for now. It is quite relevant to some of what I've had to say before:

Published a year before the bursting of a bubble that, ironically, plunged the western world into a nearly identical economic crisis, Michael Zielenziger presented an incisive yet blinkered account of Japan's 21st-century failings; its economic stagnation, its crisis of confidence, and the deep scars left on the psyche of a generation of hopeless young men.

Some 15 years later, after two decades of withering political economy and the startling rise of western-style hikikomori, it is hard to fault the author for some of his mistaken presumptions: that this was a uniquely Japanese crisis born of uniquely Japanese pathologies rooted in its history and culture, that Japan needed to simply embrace the dynamism of a competitive and globalized economy in order to recover, and that its regimented society must embrace liberal pluralism in order to develop a true alternative to the heavy hand of the state.

The structure of the book mirrors that of a bewildered youth leaving his room and exploring the world, beginning with a microscopic examination of individual families laboring under the stress of hikikomori offspring, before gradually expanding its focus outward to examine the social and corporate world and eventually the international relations between Japan and the rest of the world. Through it all, the heart of this journalism-turned-book is oriented around its humanistic concern for the young men the author sought out to understand modern Japan. We learn about the plight of young men with seemingly little motivation and direction, who lash out at their parents, who take solitary walks through Tokyo's sprawling neighborhoods at night, who hole themselves up in their rooms and find recourse in fantasy worlds, anime, and manga. Sound familiar?

The theory of the case is that the Japan of the early 21st century is ruled by a soft managerial despotism that stifles creative expression and individuality even as it ostensibly guarantees the freedoms of its citizens. Its 20th-century traumas having not been adequately grappled with, its booming economy collapsed under the rapid deflation of an asset bubble, and its mores remain unchanged after co-opting western techniques of modernization without their complementary value systems, Japan has become a "hikikomori nation" incapable of contending with the challenges of modernity and unwilling to take the hard steps necessary to understand itself. Its national conglomerates, dense bureaucracy, and parasitical "press clubs" operate under a revolving door of patronage networks in which responsibility is widely disseminated and all are left unaccountable, even as rigid social mores meticulously pick out and remove dissenters from the nation's midst. The result is a hollow civil society, authoritarian culture, no effective mediator between individual and state, and near-total absence of social capital in Japanese society.

There is little doubt that much of the description is true. Anyone who pierces the thin veil with which Japan shrouds itself will see just what the author sees: the replacement of traditional Japanese aesthetic for dreary modernism, its single-minded devotion to education at the expense of all else, its stifling mechanisms of socialization, and the deep repression that sometimes explodes into shocking displays of violence. It is a far cry from the utopian image projected onto its western japanophiles by the cultural exports they readily consume. But time has demonstrated that the author's prescription - a sudden and dramatic individualistic revolution -misses the mark, and may well do much to land us in the same place.

The value judgments that inform his critique inform his solution, which automatically lends suspicion to the value of that critique. One need only look at the present state of the US and Europe, where young men retreat from society, take comfort in cartoons and video games, and in the worst instances engage in mass shooting sprees. Its people now die the same deaths of despair that the author laments as peculiarly Japanese. The same transformations in social mores that the author champions as a triumph of western flexibility in opposition to Japanese dogmatism now preclude a growing share of young people from sex and marriage. Inability to reckon with the tradeoffs of privatization and "shareholder" capitalism deindustrialized large swaths of developed nations and precipitated the rehabilitation of industrial policy in policy-making circles, precisely the kind of thinking the author identifies as responsible for Japan's economic stagnation.

Zielenziger dedicated a few paragraphs towards the end to the notion that the two extremes of the pendulum, extreme individualism and extreme collectivism, may both produce social dysfunction. Compared to his repetitive paeans for the protestant work ethic, he does not dwell on it nearly long enough. Nor does he take this essential insight to its logical conclusion: that a planned society and an unplanned society will, in the long run, produce the same kinds of systemic dysfunction. Creating thick networks of social trust will be as challenging in the United States's atomized society as it will be in a Japan dominated by its inflexible "Iron Triangle". The author gestures at this but does not follow through. Still, the insights here are valuable, and the dearth of hikikomori studies makes this a valuable source of information and an intriguing starting point for those who perceive that our similar conditions are more than mere passing resemblances. Japan's issues differ from ours only in the temporal realm. Their state of decay is not different, merely slightly advanced, and perhaps intertwined.
 

Addendum: I will have more to say on this, if only because it has sprinkled some breadcrumbs which I suspect will lead me down a rather steep rabbit hole. Zielenziger hypothesizes that it was the progressive embrace of western values, particularly its Protestantism by reformers like Yu kil-chun who in turn inherited ideas passed down to them during their travels by a certain Yankee intelligentsia then under the sway of Spencerism, which led Korea down the path to modernization and the embrace of a more open foreign policy before its subsumption into the Japanese empire. The curious connection between Darwinism and "progressive" notions has been noticed before, and it is a line of inquiry which will yield much to whomever chooses to tug on the strand.