Online Variorum of Darwin's Origin of Species: second British edition (1860), page 490
I live in a residential area, in a place called “East halberd pieces”.
And some lower middle-class homes, everything within a minute walking.
Yeah, there would not be a lot to say of this area some alien had not set up. 4 buildings full of foreigners from all over the world are constantly leading their own way of living in this quiet area.
One has to know that “As of the end of 2004, 1.97 million foreign nationals were registered in Japan, accounting for about 1.6 percent of the total population (127.69 million)” http://www.migrationinformation.org/Feature/display.cfm?ID=487
But I am pretty sure that if you compare the ratio of Japanese nationals to foreigners within Katahoko Higashi, the percentage will be much higher.
They do not act as tourists, nor do they really try to integrate the local society. They are temporary residents.
I have not been living here long enough to acknowledge the actual changes and polemics this bunch of foreigners brought here. But what I notice as of today, local people do not even pay attention to temporary residents. They have integrated our presence as a fact, something unavoidable in the absence of being benefic. But I do believe that our presence, how annoying and disturbing, bring those local people an opening on the external world some of them would never get.
Nice pictures and interesting observations. I am happy you defined your neighborhood.
ReplyDeleteI don't think that foreign students are counted as foreign nationals in japan, or even temporary residents. You are foreign students. There are different visa categories. But I do like how you try to apply your neighborhood case study to larger issues and themes.