Right now, Japanese people are having sex. Not all the Japanese people at once, mind you. But itâs going on as you read this. Forget what youâve recently heard about the countryâs bedroom habits, because itâs just not true.
Over the weekend, The Observer, one of the U.K.âs most respected newspapers, ran a piece titled, âWhy Arenât Young People in Japan Having Sex?â It has been aggregated around the internet in pieces that range from alarmist âJapanâs Sexual Apathy Is Endangering the Global Economyâ (yikes!) to âJapanâs Hottest New Sex Trend is Not Having Sexâ (so trendy!) and âYoung People in Japan Have Given Up on Sexâ (all of the young peopleâtheyâre done!).
In The Observer piece, data is wheeled out to prove that either young Japanese are not doing it or theyâre not having babiesâitâs hard to tell sometimes, because there are young people interviewed by the paper do talk about having sex. I didnât see any babies, though.
Some of the data is surprising! Some of it is totally misinterpreted or misconstrued. The Observer claims that âanother study found that a third of people under 30 had never dated at all.â SoâŠtwo-thirds have, then? Last I checked, âdatingâ and âhaving one-night standsâ or simply âhaving sexâ were different. And according to that same study, one in ten couples got married after getting pregnant. But I thought young Japanese people werenât having sex?
One of the most damning bits of data in The Observer piece purports to say that 90 percent of women say âstaying singleâ is better than what they think being married is like. As Twitter user Inoue Eido points out, the survey actually says that nearly 90 percent of woman who havenât married do plan on getting hitched. Itâs worth noting that the number is higher than it was in the 2002 and the 1997 survey. The original survey also notes that around 87 percent of women think thereâs merits to being singleâit does not say âstaying single.â
Data is tricky. It might be factual, but itâs not truth. Here, the data rolled out doesnât specifically prove people in Japan arenât having sex. Itâs correlation. Guilt by association. Innuendo. Whatâs more, the numbers simply support the poll at hand, and are not necessarily representative of the larger population. Last yearâs U.S. presidential election offers proof positive of that.
Also concerning is the inaccurate assertions about the Japanese language. As noted by Inoue Eido, The Observer claims there is an old Japanese saying that goes, âMarriage is a womanâs grave.â There is a Japanese saying that goes, âMarriage is the graveyard of lifeâ (âç”ć©ăŻäșșçăźćąć Žă§ăăâ), but itâs non-gender specific and a reworking of a quote by French poet Baudelaire. There is actually an old Japanese saying that goes, âMarriage is a womanâs happinessâ (âç”ć©ăŻć„łăźćčžăâ), but that doesnât get a mention.
And then, thereâs the claim that working women are called âoniyomeâ (éŹŒć«) or âdemon wife.â Japanese language dictionaries (here and here) define the word as pertaining to mean wivesânot working wives. The word âoniyomeâ was popularized in Japan in 2005 with a TV show called Oniyome Nikki (éŹŒć«æ„èš) or âDemon Wife Diaryâ that featured a husband who was henpecked by his mean stay-at-home wife.
Finally, thereâs the claim thereâs something the Japanese media calls âsekkusu shinai shoukougunâ (ă»ăăŻăčăăȘăçć矀) or âcelibacy syndrome.â On Google, the only mentions I can find of the Japanese media using the term is last December in a tawdry Japanese tabloid about the numer of female virgins at Japanese universities. The same tabloid interviewed the 52-year-old sex worker, which The Observer profiled in the Japanese sexless piece it published this weekend. There might be other instances of the term being used, but thatâs what Google is barfing up.
Okay, the decreasing population is a problem in Japanâa big problem. Yes, thatâs true! But itâs the result of many things: A baby boom, changing family structure, poor child care infrastructure, andrestrictive immigration policies that ultimately limit population growth. This is incredibly complex and nuanced stuffâand perhaps, not as interesting as reading about people screwing. Simply writing it off as, âOh, well, Japanese people donât have sexâ seems to dehumanize an entire country. People have sex. Itâs what we do.
https://lastchance.cc/inside-japans-pleasure-hotels-892099090%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
What makes the timing of this story somewhat odd is that it comes as Japanâs fertility rate hits a 16-year high, rising slightly last year. (Yes, the birthrate rose for women in their 30s and dropped for those under 30, indicating that many Japanese women, like women in many other countries, are waiting longer to have children. In Japan, the average marrying age is now around 29~31.)
And Japan isnât the only country battling low birthrates. Heck, European countries like Italy, Spain, and Germany do, too. Maybe we can look forward to outlandish claims about their sex lives, too?
Photos: Koshigayacon, KTV
Note: An earlier version of this article said the story in question was published in The Guardian. It was published in The Observer and on the website that paper shares with The Guardian
To contact the author of this post, write to bashcraftATkotaku.com or find him on Twitter @Brian_Ashcraft
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