So I finished Memoirs of a Geisha today.
I’m struck by the subtlety of the Japanese culture that I was largely ignorant of.
I was raised wholly American, which is to say that I didn’t learn my parents’ native tongues, and didn’t learn any of their traditions and cultures.
As a US Army soldier, my father heavily courted my mother while stationed in Japan. I use the word courted here, but in truth he hounded her, to hear her tell the story. It’s really quite cute and makes me smile to listen to the two of them recount it from time to time.
When they both left Japan to go to my father’s next duty station in Texas, some time between February 1964 and the following February, they found a very racially charged America. They were two young kids who barely understood one another, communicating between themselves in their own dialect of broken english. They feared that raising children who couldn’t communicate with their schoolmates would lead to a lifetime filled w/ the same kinds of horrible inhumanities they’d seen all too often in the news.
My brothers and I, sheltered from our heritage, have had the thread w/ our past severed. This book helps me repair that damage.
4 Comments
Steve aka p_enut
Nice post Omas. Have you got a chance to watch the movie as well? I never did get a chance to catch it.
Dork
Yeah — the movie compares well with the book, and like many of the oriental movies of the past decade, is visually stunning.
Amazon’s got a buy-one-get-one special goin’ on right now, so I may pick it up ok the cheap.
Interesting side-note: many of the actors are Chinese :p
Jenna
Yes, and the japanese public were outraged and protested the movie because of the chinese actors. And the movie was BANNED in china for the thought of chinese actors playing japanese characters is demeaning.
Dork
I saw it w/ my Mom — she was a bit hesitant because of the actors, but even more irritating to her was that the consultant that was hired to help w/ the movie was fired because she kept contradicting what the filmmakers wanted to do.
In the end, she liked it and was happy to have seen it.