A Conversation for The Reluctant Gaijin in Japan: Stereotypes and Toilets
Toilets...
Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor Started conversation Jan 18, 2010
I believe it was Erica Jong who commented on how much you could learn about a civilisation from its toilets. (She said Germany's explained World War II - I used to live in Germany, and all I know is, they are annoying.)
The old-fashioned ones in Japan sound like the ones that start appearing as far east as Romania - then continue to pop up anywhere the Ottoman Empire ever existed.
Porcelain things on the floor, with footprints? They are very annoying...when I lived in Greece, I'd run into them everywhere.
Maybe the Edited Guide needs to feature a Toilet Map?
Toilets...
aka Bel - A87832164 Posted Jan 18, 2010
You find them in France, too. I think they're horrible.
Toilets...
aka Bel - A87832164 Posted Jan 18, 2010
Speaking of Germany and bad toilets: I guess this explains it all: A53733279
Toilets...
aka Bel - A87832164 Posted Jan 18, 2010
I think there is an edited guide entry on public toilets in the UK.
Toilets...
Awix Posted Jan 30, 2010
My understanding is that the Japanese consider the squat-n-drop style lavvy to be more hygienic than the Western kind as no part of your person actually touches the porcelein. I never liked them much either and managed to spend 15 months in Japan while only using one about 3 times.
Toilets...
ITIWBS Posted Aug 29, 2010
Bel's link from post #3 reminds me vividly of the facilities on the farm when I was a kid in SW Oklahoma back in the early 1950's, an old fashioned outhouse privy 30 yards downwind from the house and an absolute nightmare to use in the snow with a high wind blowing.
Our drinking and washing water on the other hand was trucked in and stored in a 10,000 gallon concrete cistern under the house, accessed by a hand pump one had to prime from a pitcher of water in order for it to work.
During the 1930s, with a renewed flurry in the 1950s, throwing outhouses up on the roof of the house that supported them was a popular teenage Halloween prank... a rough and ready way of forcing modernization, I suppose.
Toilets...
Awix Posted Sep 24, 2010
Sounds like some of the privies in the countryside of Kyrgyzstan. It was extremely brisk and breezy even in the autumn, what they must be like to use in the depths of winter I shudder to imagine...
Toilets...
ITIWBS Posted Oct 1, 2010
On the bright side of old privys,
http://books.google.com/books?id=zRcFQ_gBNI8C&pg=PA203&lpg=PA203&dq=Privy+%22Archaeology%22+Artifacts&source=bl&ots=SP-xwlSUkg&sig=ZQm-j-qL9xxW7aoQ2MkgajA9aa4&hl=en&ei=xbalTJyLKon0swPo3cD9Dg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=7&ved=0CC0Q6AEwBjhQ#v=onepage&q=Privy%20%22Archaeology%22%20Artifacts&f=false
Toilets...
Awix Posted Oct 3, 2010
In the cities the toilets are western-style, mainly because the cities were built by people originally from Russia.
Outside the cities the privy will as often as not be (literally) a hole in the ground.
Toilets...
Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor Posted Oct 3, 2010
Ah, that explains it. I swear there's an east/west 'privy line' that coincides with cultures that used chairs.
Toilets...
Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor Posted Oct 4, 2010
We lived for a year in Xanthi, Greece, up north, near the Rhodopi Mountains. Eastern toilets all over the place.
The town also had a minaret, and a Pomax population. These really cool people are Muslim, speak a dialect of Bulgarian, and mostly have blond, curly hair. Their kids are a joy to teach...especially compared with lazy kids from Athens...
Anyhow, the people from the villages used to come in to market. I'd see them waiting for the bus on a nearby corner. The men, who wore western clothes, sometimes sat in cane-bottomed chairs.
The ladies, wearing headscarves, a sort of longish taffeta coat, and high-heeled, patent-leather shoes, squatted on the ground. I envied their stamina in that position. I would have fallen down howling after 10 minutes.
I was guessing that at home, these people did not use chairs. The husbands went out to work, and were used to them.
Toilets...
Awix Posted Oct 13, 2010
We used to call that pose 'the Asian squat' in Japan. Don't remember seeing it so much in central Asia or on the subcontinent, though.
Toilets...
Awix Posted Oct 16, 2010
I think it may relate to how heavily colonised/occupied a country was, and how open it was to foreign ideas. Kyrgyzstan and Sri Lanka were both colonies, but Japan has never really been conquered, only occupied.
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Toilets...
- 1: Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor (Jan 18, 2010)
- 2: aka Bel - A87832164 (Jan 18, 2010)
- 3: aka Bel - A87832164 (Jan 18, 2010)
- 4: Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor (Jan 18, 2010)
- 5: aka Bel - A87832164 (Jan 18, 2010)
- 6: Awix (Jan 30, 2010)
- 7: ITIWBS (Aug 29, 2010)
- 8: Awix (Sep 24, 2010)
- 9: Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor (Sep 24, 2010)
- 10: ITIWBS (Oct 1, 2010)
- 11: Awix (Oct 3, 2010)
- 12: Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor (Oct 3, 2010)
- 13: Awix (Oct 4, 2010)
- 14: Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor (Oct 4, 2010)
- 15: Awix (Oct 13, 2010)
- 16: Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor (Oct 13, 2010)
- 17: Awix (Oct 16, 2010)
- 18: Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor (Oct 16, 2010)
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