A tourist weekend in Tokyo

Sanja Matsuri, Asakusa, Tokyo, May 17, 2003: click for larger image (70K)

Phew, what an exhausting but exhilirating weekend I had. As readers of the moblog will know, on Saturday, I went to Asakusa’s Sensoji Temple for the Sanja Matsuri, one of the three main annual festivals in the Tokyo area. And yesterday, I went to a Sumo tournament for the first time.

Sometimes it takes a tourist’s view to help put things into perspective. I’ve been feeling a bit down on Japan of late, for a variety of reasons. It may be ephemeral, the high of a non-plebeian, low-responsibility (thank you Naoko!) weekend that will wear off shortly, but as I was returning home last night it occurred to me that there’s no place in the world I’d rather be right now than in Japan.

Seeing a sumo tournament was something I had been looking forward to for a long time, and as I was going into Tokyo I was anxious, not so much in anticipation of the event, but rather that perhaps, like so many things in life, it would not live up to the expectations I had laid on top of it. But it lived up to the the advance billing and more. I think I could sense this the moment I got off the train and saw the large paintings of sumo wrestlers in the Ryogoku train station. And when I entered the arena, and I had my ticket torn by fellow Hawaii-bred Jesse Kuhaulua (now Oyakata Azumazeki, who wrestled as Takamiyama), I knew this was going to be a great day. (I was so in awe and not a little bit nervous that all I could do was mutter “Thank you” when he handed me back my ticket!)

I didn’t shoot much digital on either day, so here are a couple of “token” shots until I get back my film from the lab. I went a bit crazy with the analog, racking up about 25 rolls over both days. I even went out and bought a zoom lens, which came in handy for the sumo.

Natsu Basho Sumo Tournament, Ryogoku Kokugikan, Tokyo, May 18, 2003: click for larger image (61K)

Hitachi Family Snapshots No. 3

Continuing with more snapshots from Hitachi, this time of my mother-in-law, who was born and raised there. In the first image, she is standing on the site of the house she grew up in, a company house rented from Hitachi Mine, who her father worked for. The house was razed many many years ago. The second photo was taken at the location of her old elementary school, and the third across the street from one of the Mine’s old complexes. While I was taking some pictures she went up an embankment and pulled these stalks out of the ground and started munching on them, like a kid.

Mother-in-law, Hitachi, May 4, 2003 (71K)

Mother-in-law and grandson, Hitachi, May 4, 2003 (41K)

Mother-in-law, Hitachi, May 5, 2003 (54K)

Six weblogs from Japan-based American students

In light of the group blog Tawawa that I mentioned a few days ago, I’ve come across 6 weblogs of students who have been studying in Japan during the Spring semester, housed under the umbrella site the East Asia Center:

Andy Clark: Understanding Japanese Youth Culture Through the Interview
Austin Damiani: Cultivating Interdisciplinary Synthesis
John Grillo: Explorations in Learning Music in Japan
Abi Iverson: Developing My Artistic Self
Jaymie Wisneski: Understanding the Process of Artistic Creation
Rachel Winckler

Welcome to our cooperative blogging project! We are six university students studying abroad in Kyoto, through Friends World Program, an experiential learning center affiliated with Long Island University. This semester, five of us are experimenting with computer supported cooperative learning to carry out action research projects of our own. In combination with weekly face-to-face meetings, we will each be running our own blogs and cooperating with each other’s projects.

Sadly, it looks like I’m too late to this party, as the “The Semester is Over!” posts I found would seem to indicate. I’m not sure where these blogs will go from here, but at the very least, I recommend perusing the archives for each of these blogs, as I found some interesting analyses and takes on Japan and Japanese culture therein.