Another anniversary: Hmmn turns 1 year old

I never thought I would make it this far, but exactly 365 days ago, at 4:14 am on May 16, 2002, I started this weblog. I wrote then that I wouldn’t be surprised if this lasted 5 days, which was how long my previous attempt at blogging had lasted.

I don’t really know why I started this, somehow in some convoluted fashion I read the term “blog” somewhere and clicked further to find out what this hopelessly horrid-sounding term could represent. The next thing I knew (it literally was only 2 or 3 days later) I was downloading Movable Type and posting my first entries. (For a brief and incomplete list of who inspired me, see my “parent blogs” on the left of this Blogtree page).

I never go back and look at those entries now, I find them embarrassing in the extreme, written as I flailed about trying to find this blog’s raison d’être. Politics was an easy target — and for some un-explained reason, particularly the Arab-Israeli conflict — and you’d be hard-pressed to find anything remotely related to what this blog has evolved into, in those moments that I allow myself to think this blog actually has some sort of definable raison d’être. Certainly I could have been in Timbuk 2 for all the writing I did about Japan at that time. For some reason, it just didn’t feel appropriate or “right.” How things have changed. Now, I feel it would be inappropriate or wrong if I didn’t talk about Japan (some of the time, that is). I have a few people to thank for that, mainly Kiyo (where forth hath thou gone, my friend?) and M. I came close to giving up the ghost more than once, and for perservering I have my loyal readers to thank, for their comments and emails, and their visits, even when a month went by without a post.

My clock says 4:13 so it’s time to put this stake into the virtual ground, and get started on the next year. I hope you’ll stick around and see how this goes. I personally have no idea, and frankly I’d have it no other way.

The right impression: Hans-Jurgen Syberberg’s website moves

HJS_Kassel_HP_Foto_crop.jpgI find this utterly amazing, in this age of closely-guarded copyrights, that if one is so inclined, one can watch Hans-Jurgen Syberberg’s entire 7 1/2-hour film opus, Hitler – ein Film aus Deutschland (Hitler, a film from Germany, 1977), on the web, for free. The film is divided up into 4 parts so you don’t have to watch the whole thing in one sitting. (At the moment, the film is only available in its original German. However, there are indications on the site that an English-subtitled version will be available soon.)

I have never seen this film, but it has been oft-written about (most famously by Susan Sontag; her essay on the film is available in her book Under the Sign of Saturn), and was released in the United States in 1979 (as Our Hitler) through the efforts of Francis Ford-Coppola. Syberberg was part of the “German New Wave” of cinema artists to appear in Germany during the late 60’s, though his works were too experimental and inaccessible to achieve anything near the level of popular renown that Fassbinder or Wenders or Herzog did.

This film, along with a 60-minute piece from 2000 called Nietzsche Ecce Homo (Schleef), is available on Syberberg’s website Syberberg.de, a site divided into 4 parts, and well worth checking out even if your German is limited to “Ich bin ein Berliner” like mine is.

Of particular note is part 4, Syberberg’s quasi-weblog (“Web-Tagebuch: Daily Currency”), which dates back to January 2001, and which has been updated everyday, as far as I can tell, from December 2001 through to today. While there is some writing, for the most part it’s a visual diary, each day a “collage” of images. On any given day, you can find photographs both old and new (those taken by Syberberg as well as found images), magazine and newspaper clippings, video captures of his various films, or stuff he has shot on video, or off the tv, and scans of various ephemera. I could spend hours in his archives, for each day feels like you’re walking into an installation or standing in front of a collage in a gallery, forced by the absence of language to make your own associations and meaning. Absolutely wonderful.

By all means check out the remainder of the site as well. The “autobiography” page has clips from a lot of his various works, as well as old home movies, and images of the various ephemera of Syberberg’s career, like old 8mm cameras and film boxes, and old family snapshots as well.

At the moment, there is an Syberberg exhibition at the Centre Pompidou in Paris called Nossendorf Syberberg Paris, which includes a retrospective of some of his films. On his site, there are web cams set up in Nossendorf (Syberberg’s birthplace) and at the Pompidou, though as Syberberg writes, “Paris Webcams dont move. Therefore wrong impression.”

Additional Japan-based blogs, including new group blog Tawawa

A few weeks ago I came across Tawawa, a “group weblog” written by English students at Mie University (Mie Prefecture) and the brainchild of Rudolf Ammann, a member of the Faculty of Education there. At the time I discovered it (those good ol’ referrer logs), the site (and class, English Composition III — Writing for the Web) had just launched and Ammann asked that I not link to it at that point.

Actually, the site and class have undergone some “growing pains” and Ammann and I have had a fruitful email discussion about some of the issues that having the class weblog brought up, including how to get Japanese students to express themselves, in a language not their own, rather than simple links with a banal word or two about them. Seeing the site evolve over the last few weeks, I’m not sure exactly what Ammann did but the site has started to come into its own and the entries are much more expansive than when the site launched. The students are also started to contribute comments to each others’ entries. Perhaps in the end, the students just needed to become familiar and comfortable with the weblog format, which I presume they previously had not been aware of.

Having solved some technical issues, they are now also creating a group weblog in Japanese as well.

Being involved in education myself, I’m very keen on how blogging and education will interface in the future. One site in particular that I’ve been reading a lot recently is weblogg-ed, which is subtitled “using web logs in education.” This site also features a long list of “educator blogs” in its left margin.

In addition to Tawawa, here are other sites recently added to the “Other Personal Views from Japan” blogroll:

Andrea in Japan — Rambling Notes
The Blog From Another Dimension
Confessions of a Grade School Role Model
The Flounder
Jax in Japan
Jay’s Japan Journal
joshjacobson.net
Josh’s Japan Log
Life in Japan 2003
My Travels in Japan
On my mind…
Sake-Drenched Postcards
Seiji Does Japan
Sonic in Tokyo
Through Rose Tinted Glasses
Yvonna – Journal of Japan

Also, a blogger named James, who doesn’t live in Japan but who claims to be “hopelessly obsessed with Japan and travel abroad,” has created an Interactive Japan Blogger’s map using Javascript, with 47 of us on there. He’s got a bunch listed in “unknown,” so if you’re in there send him an email with your location.