Public pools. Gyms. Resorts. Itâs common to see âno tattoos allowedâ signs at establishments like this. In Japan, there is certainly a stigma towards tattoos. But why?
The easiest explanation, of course, is that Japanese gangsters (the yakuza) traditionally mark their bodies with tattoos. But not everyone who has tattoos in Japan is in organized crime. Regular folks have them. Celebs, too. Some have them for the same reasons that people do in the West, whether thatâs fashion or simply because they are interested in body art. And this stigma isnât a recent phenomenon.
Japan has had a long tattoo history. As The Japan Times points out, thereâs a theory that tattoos were important in the countryâs Jomon Period (10,000 B.C. to 300 B.C.). There isnât any physical proof that the Jomon people tattooed themselves; however, a Chinese historical record written at around 300 A.D. said all Japanese men tattooed their faces and bodies. This history is marked by a love-hate relationship: In the 17th century, for example, criminals were tattooed to blatantly mark them in shame instead of punishment through mutilation. As VanishingTattoo points out, some criminals even had the Japanese for âdogâ (çŹ) inked on their foreheads.
During the following century, however, tattoos became fashionable.
However, tattoos were banned in the mid-to-late 19th century as the country opened up to the outside world. The fear was that the custom might seem primitive to foreigners or mocked abroad. The Japanese government saw tattoos as âbarbaricâ and certainly not part of their program to modernize. It wasnât until after World War II that the legal prohibition against tattooing was lifted. By then, the stigma had once again set in.
Recently on 2ch, Japanâs largest forum, there was a thread on why Japanese people were against tattoos. As mentioned above, there are many regular folks in Japan who arenât! However, tattoos are far more of a rarity in daily life in Japan than abroad.
Via 2ch, here are some of the reasons why tattoos arenât accepted in Japan. As these are forum comments, take them for what they are: forum comments.
However, the sample of comments, which range from negative to positive, might provide an inside look at how some in Japan view tattooing.
âTheyâre dirty.â
âThereâs a long history of them being proof people are criminals.â
âTattoos were used to identify criminals.â
âFor a long time in Japan, tattoo has equaled âyakuzaâ or âhoodlum.'â
âEven among foreigners, gangsters and bad dudes getting inked is cool, but when normal people do it, itâs lame.â
âIn Europe, tattoos are a working class thing.â
âI think you all donât get it. Theyâre fashion. People like you in dorky clothes are far more unpleasant.â
âGirls who get inked are cool, and thatâs why I like them.â
âIf you go to Shibuya, tattoos are normal.â
âI heard you cannot get an MRI if you have a tattoo. That true?â
âIf you get a tattoo, then you cannot get a MRI, and then you canât detect cancer early!â
âThose who showed their tattoos to your parents, what reaction did you get? Did they cry?â
âItâs come to this because there are lots of idiots with preconceived notions who think that tattoos equal scary. The majority of Japanese, with their preconceived notions, are quivering cowards.â
âTattooing is part of Japanese culture.â
âThe color (of tattoos) is dirty. The only thing it resembles is moss.â
âPeople are free to do what they like, right? I donât have one, thoughâŠâ
âWhen ever I see tattoos show up in pornos, I go limp.â
âYou canât erase them!â
âMore than tattoos, I hate people who hide the tattoos they had removed.â
âAbroad, having a tattoo is proof you were in the military. In Japan, itâs proof you are low class.â
âItâs fine if people want to get them. Just donât put them out in front of others.â
âBecause in Japan, if youâre not respectable, youâre a criminal.â
Before someone in comments posts it, here is the MythBusters episode on tattoos and MRIs.
Note: If you have tattoos and are planning on visiting Japan, you might run into problems at, for example, hot springs and public pools. Either cover your tattoos with bandages or band-aids (if possible!) or rent rooms at hot springs that come with a private bath. For business trips, unless your work is connected to the arts, it might be good to discretely cover your ink (if possible).
ăȘăæ„æŹäșșăŻćșéă«ćŠćźçăȘăźăïŒ [2ch]
Photo: Nagashima Onsen
To contact the author of this post, write to bashcraftATkotaku.com or find him on Twitter @Brian_Ashcraft
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