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No. 7 | Winter 2006 |
| Ozu Yasujiro's Good Morning and Technology in Postwar Japanese Childhood Greg Johnson Ozu Yasujiro's (1903-1963) Good Morning (1959, Ohayo The image of power lines, however, is clearer. It invokes the changes technology is delivering to average Japanese lives. In the final scene, two shy young adults stand on a train station platform and make small talk about the lovely weather to avoid any hint of their unspoken mutual affection. Ironically, they appreciate the sunshine while gazing through a twine of electrical wires, with smoke from factories hard at work on the economic miracle wafting in the distance. The film highlights childhood in a Japan on the verge of an unprecedented high growth period, the Iwato Boom from 1959 to 1961 that provided an average growth rate of over 12%, and the start of Prime Minister Ikeda Hayato's Income Doubling Plan, which was implemented from 1960-1965. Based on Japan's prewar advances in technology, the economy was primed for technological ascension as well, particularly after Sony's 1955 introduction of the transistor radio. Japan had profited from its position as an American military launch pad during the Korean War, but there were subsequent economic fluctuations through the 1950s, as the situation of the boys' English tutor attests. He lost his job when his employer went under so he teaches English and does technical translation work. Some aspects of the story are nevertheless remarkably contemporary. Jobs today are also being lost due to companies folding or "risutora" (from the English word "restructuring"), the Japanese word for downsizing due to mergers or outsourcing. In contrast to the 1950s, though, unemployment and a weakened work ethic are postponing full adulthood for some Japanese youth now. Parents and politicians currently fret about semi-employed "freeters" (from the English word "free" and the German word "Arbeiter") meaning in Japanese part-time or temporary workers who may quit jobs at will, and "neets" (those Not in Education Employment or Training). Such young people are spending an increasingly longer time financially dependent on their aging parents, creating a type of extended adolescence. The increasingly later average age at first marriage and delayed or avoided parenthood in Japan are blamed partly on the hesitation of contemporary youth to take on family responsibilities in light of financial insecurity that their parents, who married in an era of high economic growth, did not experience. The 1950s English tutor in Good Morning is actively seeking work, so he doesn't look like today's freeter The Japanese birthrate has plummeted from the 1950s and in 2005 the nation experienced its first recorded population decline in the modern era. The government and businesses fear a decline in the supply of workers and consumers. Although children were not in short supply in Ozu's day, one can imagine from the film a future with fewer children and more resources expended per child. In fact, the steepest drop in Japan's postwar fertility rate occurred between 1950 and 1960, from 3.65 births per woman at the start of the decade, to 2.0 births at the end.(1) The suburban families in Good Morning reflect this trend, having only one or two children, invariably boys. The slovenly young couple who have a TV are childless. The brothers' English tutor lives with his mother in a childless home. In contrast to today, however, none of the married women in the film are working outside the home. Television poisons relations in the small community. The wife with a television prances around in a bathrobe in the afternoon with a cigarette dangling from her mouth, in contrast to the more prim, kimono-clad and TV-less matrons of the neighborhood. Minoru and Isamu neglect their homework, skip their English tutorial, and steal away every afternoon to watch the forbidden electric box. They talk back when their mother rebukes them, and remain defiant with impunity when their father comes home from work and gives them a rather weak dressing down. The boys go on strike, vowing not to speak in the presence of adults until their father buys a TV. The children are mocking meaningless adult speech and protesting their father's refusal to join the new appliance consuming society. Their silence provokes gossip of an imagined conflict between their mother and the other women of the neighborhood. News that a second neighbor has purchased a major electrical appliance, a washing machine, incites rumors about missing neighborhood association dues and the possibility of malfeasance. When the recalcitrant boys' mother retaliates by denying them snacks, they abscond with the family rice pot. Since rice is the staple food in Japan, that would leave the family with a meager dinner. The English tutor brings the larcenous youngsters home. But instead of punishing them, their father gives in and buys the TV the brothers demand, ironically from a newly retired neighbor who has taken up a second career in electrical appliance sales. Japanese adults today are increasingly frightened by children's use of technology. An even more insidious phenomenon than neet or freeters are the hikikomori The children of Good Morning fortunately live in a safer world. The most unsavory character in the film is a knife-wielding con man who teams with a suave partner to coerce housewives into buying home safety equipment. The only danger TV poses to the boys is that they will neglect their studies and join the throngs of idiots that the new electrical device is going to create. However, Ozu constructs a conflict between parents who distrust the latest technology and the children and irresponsible adults who become its eager consumers. And, significantly, the conflict is resolved when the parents relent to the insidious new gadget and the children get a TV. Ozu's film Good Morning Notes: (1) See J. Sean Curtin's "The Declining Birthrate in Japan: Part Eight:Population Scenarios and Economic Consequences" Social Trends #25: January 28, 2003, http://www.glocom.org/special_topics/social_trends/20030128_trends_s25/index.html. Accessed January 7, 2006. (2) Here are just a few examples. In Ichikawa Jun's 1989 film No Life King (No Raifu Kingu) children become absorbed in a video game supposedly containing a fatal curse. Nakata Hideo's Ring (Ringu, 1997) similarly accosts children (and adults) with a mysterious videocassette that is killing youth who watch it. In Miike Takashi’s 2003 One Missed Call (Chakushin ari ), teenagers receive via their cell phones prophetic voice mail containing their last words. Inadvertently repeating their message causes their sudden demise. Install (Insutoru, 2004), directed by Kataoka Kei, depicts a 10 year-old primary school boy who recruits a seventeen-year-old high school girl into participating in cybersex. Next -- Previous -- Table of Contents © Society for the History of Children and Youth, 2006 |