Saturday, October 27, 2007

Ian Fleming in Tokyo

More from Thrilling Cities. Fleming discusses the physical characteristics of the Japanese...

The first thing that struck me was how gay and purposeful the young Japanese are and how healthy a rice diet must be. They move at an astonishing speed compared with the easy stroll you will normally see in the comparable Piccadilly or Champs-Elysees crowds. And how bright all theire eyes are, wiht the sort of intelligent brightness you see in small animals! Very few of the men wear hats and would look rather foolish if they did so, and yet you never see a man with a hair out of place or wiht curly or unruly hairs. It is all a sea of black shiny heads upon which, Gulliver-like, the Westerner looks down. They are rude and rough to each other on the streets, in sharp contrast with their good manners when at rest. They bump and jostle without apology and apparently without offence. The eyes of the women are not almond-shaped. It is the tautness of the Mongolian fold of the upper eyelid that appears to slant the eye, and I learnt later, from Tiger Saito, that facial surgery to remove the Mongolian fold and widen the eye is immensely popular all over the country. The girls are aping the West in countless other fashions. Long legs have become desirable, and those hideous wooden clogs have been exchanged for stiletto heels. The Eastern hair-dos, which I find enchanting, are going out in favour of of permanent waves and other fuzzy fashions. Traditional dress - the kimono and the obi, the brightly coloured, silken sash worn about the waist - is disappearing fast and is now worn, so far as the towns are concerned, only in the family circle, together with the giant cake of hair and monstrous hair-pins in the Madame Butterfly fashion.

2 comments:

odienator said...

He left out the part about the angry monkeys!

Jeffrey Hill said...

This isn't the last post on Fleming in Tokyo, Odie, so stay tuned. Not saying there'll be angry monkeys in the others, but.....