Christmas in the Pacific Rim
I’m back from Hong Kong, and seriously jet-lagged. Before I stop thinking about that jewel of a city, however, I have a question for any cultural anthropologists in the crowd — what’s the deal with Christmas in the Pacific Rim? The city of Hong Kong — never shy of neon — was engulfed in Christmas ...
I'm back from Hong Kong, and seriously jet-lagged. Before I stop thinking about that jewel of a city, however, I have a question for any cultural anthropologists in the crowd -- what's the deal with Christmas in the Pacific Rim? The city of Hong Kong -- never shy of neon -- was engulfed in Christmas decorations the week I was there. This web site points out:: Christmas in Hong Kong is the time for the tasteless, the season for the syrupy, the holiday for the horrific -- if we're talking about lights and decorations, that is. There may be another city that can equal Hong Kong in the banality of its Christmas decorations, but it's sure to fall short in terms of sheer volume. I was told that I would see the same thing in Tokyo as well. Many Westerners who attended the WTO Ministerial expressed distaste about this phenomenon as well -- not on religious grounds, but rather because to them it epitomizes the homogenization of western tastes. I think this is much ado about nothing. I doubt that any North American city, with the possible exception of Las Vegas, would festoon itself in the same way Hong Kong has -- but then again, no other American city is as in love with neon as HK. However, to repeat my question to Tyler Cowen or anyone else who would know -- why is Christmas so big in so many non-Christian countries? My hunch is that it's a marketing opportunity, but I'm open to other suggestions.
I’m back from Hong Kong, and seriously jet-lagged. Before I stop thinking about that jewel of a city, however, I have a question for any cultural anthropologists in the crowd — what’s the deal with Christmas in the Pacific Rim? The city of Hong Kong — never shy of neon — was engulfed in Christmas decorations the week I was there. This web site points out::
Christmas in Hong Kong is the time for the tasteless, the season for the syrupy, the holiday for the horrific — if we’re talking about lights and decorations, that is. There may be another city that can equal Hong Kong in the banality of its Christmas decorations, but it’s sure to fall short in terms of sheer volume.
I was told that I would see the same thing in Tokyo as well. Many Westerners who attended the WTO Ministerial expressed distaste about this phenomenon as well — not on religious grounds, but rather because to them it epitomizes the homogenization of western tastes. I think this is much ado about nothing. I doubt that any North American city, with the possible exception of Las Vegas, would festoon itself in the same way Hong Kong has — but then again, no other American city is as in love with neon as HK. However, to repeat my question to Tyler Cowen or anyone else who would know — why is Christmas so big in so many non-Christian countries? My hunch is that it’s a marketing opportunity, but I’m open to other suggestions.
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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