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“Hikkokimori Mon” by Andrea Innocent. Wikipedia tells me hikikomori, the word I presume Ms. Innocent chose to allude to here, is a Japanese term that describes “the phenomenon of reclusive people who have chosen to withdraw from social life, often seeking extreme degrees of isolation and confinement because of various personal and social factors in their lives. “

The word reminds me of this article we featured last year blaming personal electronic devices like the Nintendo DS and mobile phones for the increasing amount of Japanese youth feeling withdrawn from the rest of society.

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See also: Handholding — photos of handheld gamers

[Via Oddities and Blurps, Andrea Innocent]

tags / andrea innocent / fanart / hikkokimori mon / loneliness / ec

/ permalink / / 1 year ago / Comments (View)
The handheld heart is a lonely hunter →

Japan’s Mainichi Daily News recently published this essay from psychiatrist Rika Kayama about the rise of personal devices like the Walkman and handheld systems, and her belief that it’s partially to blame for many of her patients’ complaints of feeling withdrawn..

An excerpt from Kayama’s article:

“Today’s youth immerse themselves in worlds of their own right before our eyes, where they can live secluded from the rest of us. Feeding into these one person worlds, personal devices such as mobile phones and handheld game systems like the Sony PSP and Nintendo DS come on to the market one after another.

The ‘make your own world anywhere’ idea has gone too far, to the point that even on the train one sees people shamelessly putting on makeup or eating cups of instant noodles as though the train carriage was their own room. …

I feel that an increasing number of people are coming to my office saying, ‘Even when I’m in a crowd I’m lonely.’ Even when they are at a popular singer’s concert or when reading a best-selling novel, these patients can’t feel any solidarity for those next to them or those reading the same book.

Sometimes they consider making an effort to make a real connection with others, such as heading out to a workers’ demonstration or other kinds of activities, but eventually decide not to go, feeling that even if they went to such a gathering, it would be them alone raising their voices.

Some may try to connect with people over the Internet, chatting with others through the medium of the keyboard, but when they turn off the power, the feeling of solidarity with those on the other end of the connection fizzles.

Whether in lively places or not, these patients say, they feel isolated, alienated.”

See also: A love left behind, The DS Life: Missed Connections

[Image via No. 110]

tags / ec / loneliness / walkman / rika kayama / mainichi daily news / essay

/ permalink / / 2 years ago / Comments (View)

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