This piece reads less like an analysis of Japan and more like a projection of Western desire onto it. The recurring assumption seems to be that because outsiders love Japan, Japan should recognize this love and reshape itself around it — economically, culturally, and socially.
What’s missing is Japanese agency. Tourism, foreign admiration, and expat enthusiasm are treated as unqualified goods, while the costs borne by people who actually live there — crowding, housing pressure, cultural friction, loss of local control — are minimized or waved away.
Admiration does not entitle outsiders to prescribe changes, nor does global popularity obligate a society to reorganize itself for foreign consumption. Framing Japan primarily as a solution to Western economic anxieties or lifestyle aspirations is ultimately a selfish lens — one that centers what we want from Japan, not what Japanese people have asked for or chosen.
polytechneur777•1mo ago
What’s missing is Japanese agency. Tourism, foreign admiration, and expat enthusiasm are treated as unqualified goods, while the costs borne by people who actually live there — crowding, housing pressure, cultural friction, loss of local control — are minimized or waved away.
Admiration does not entitle outsiders to prescribe changes, nor does global popularity obligate a society to reorganize itself for foreign consumption. Framing Japan primarily as a solution to Western economic anxieties or lifestyle aspirations is ultimately a selfish lens — one that centers what we want from Japan, not what Japanese people have asked for or chosen.