“When Gregor Samsa woke up one morning from unsettling dreams, he
found himself changed in his bed to a monstrous vermin.”
Opening line of
Kafka’s The Metamorphosis
In the midst of glitzy Ginza,
Tokyo I remembered Czech writer Franz Kafka and his book The Metamorphosis. Kafka worked in an insurance company but despised
his work. He had a problem in dealing with all authority figures in his life. In
The Metamorphosis he talked about ordinary
human beings reduced to inconsequential, inconvenient bugs (vermin). His timeless story showed a petrified Gregor Samsa lying buried deep in all of us. Surrounded by
neon lights, I remembered my days when I used to work with Panasonic India and
abhorred the word Japanese. I was reminded of the feudal nature of Japanese
corporate world. Scores of white-collar workers waiting patiently at the
crossing reminded me of our existence where we all are cogs in the wheel,
unaware of our calling.
Japan is a study in contrast. It
offers serene, zen like order and harmony in every space of life – in art,
theatre, music and even mundane daily conduct. And at the same time, such
steadfast focus on order and harmony quells individuality. It creates pressure,
stress to conform to the roles. There is no space to stand outside the line. Pyramidal
feudal structure is followed in all walks of life – from corporate life to tea
ceremony.
For the longest time, Japan,
because of its geographical location, has been shielded from the global tidal
wave of change exemplified beautifully in wood block print of The Great Wave by
Hokusai. Its island nature allows it to enforce rules on the entire society
that may be very difficult to implement in a large country. This has worked so
far. In the ever changing landscape of an inter-connected world, where
everybody is on mobile phone constantly, how will Japan resist change and keep
its cultural mooring is going to be an interesting sociological study.
Japanese ‘salaryman’ (sarariiman,
Japanese way of saying it) is the bedrock of their mostly egalitarian
white-collar working society. Sarariiman title was/is the status symbol. It
signified employment where the organization assumed the role of a father
figure providing training, lifetime employment, gradual increase in salary,
pension and housing. The system was designed for an economy that would continue
to grow and never falter. It demanded only one thing in return -- an utter
devotion to the company.
Since the ‘lost decade’, this
system is continuously coming under pressure. But there are no easy answers.
After cramming in school, university time is considered as fun time before
submitting yourself to a professional life of routine and boredom. Colleges do
not provide skills to navigate in the new world order. There are number of sarariiman
who suffers from utsu (depression). Even
now, employees are expected to contribute 80 hours a week (13 hours a day from
Monday to Saturday); not take more than 5 days of holiday in a year; not leave
the work till seniors are in office; take the last train to home and the first
train back to office. Families are supposed to ‘understand’
it as their commitment to the provider.
Japanese society has found its own
unique way of dealing with this kind of sleep deprivation. It’s called inemuri – catching up on sleep in
public. You can find people sleeping not only in places like trains, buses,
park benches but also in office meetings, classes and serious discussions. The Japanese have high tolerance for inemuri.
This is just one aspect of
Japanese life. There are far too many features of this society to admire and
learn. It just happened that I started writing about it first… Will share my
admiration in subsequent posts.
:) one of those writings where am waiting for the sequel
ReplyDelete:) one of those writings where am waiting for the sequel
ReplyDeleteWow!Love how the Jap's have a term for every human phenomenon - from depression to sleep deprivation .. Its like everything is a science for them to study and learn from.
ReplyDeleteKafka and Japan... lets see where this goes.
ReplyDeletei enjoy reading it again n again to understand better. loved the beginning....n looking Fr admiration part ....
ReplyDeleteSuper hitZ. Depression is visible on the faces of sarariimen japanisan
ReplyDeleteHitesh, this blog reflects so much of your style and attention to details nature. A wonderful read.
ReplyDeleteAgree..so well written...want to read moreeeeeeee
ReplyDeleteAlso put pics..
ReplyDelete