Japan and its own de-Westernization: Emmanuel Ruben
Emmanuel Ruben's "L'usage du Japon" (2025) portrays the country as a "topographical lightning strike": not an exotic counter-image to the West, but a fractal, trembling archipelago that defies any definitive definition. Ruben reads the country as a geographer and draftsman, shaped by a "tatamized" pop-culture childhood of judo, Nintendo, and manga, and confronts this imaginary Japan with an often Americanized, urban, disorderly reality. Between ukiyo-e, comics, maps, and Zen gardens, he discovers Japan as a realm of the clear line, the miniature, and the infraordinary, where nature is totally stylized and everyday life ritualized. Figures like Ino Tadataka become mirrors of his own writing: to measure here does not mean to possess, but to physically expose oneself to the fragment. Kyoto appears as a moss-covered graveyard of the gods, heavy with the sacred, while Shinkansen bullet trains, high-tech toilets, and glass cities mark a silent ultramodernity. The review highlights this tension as a permanent “de-Westernization”: Japan forces a dilution of the self, an acceptance of the incomplete, and the realization that map, text, and image never catch up with the territory – which is why Japan ultimately remains less a destination than a process, a vibrant school of seeing and disappearing.
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