greatfool Wrote:A lot of Japanese who are good at English probably don't like being addressed in Japanese in Hawaii- they feel like after all that study they should be competent to transact in English and feel like their skills are disrespected if they are spoken to in Japanese. This situation is completely the same as non-Japanese in Japan who complain that Japanese people speak English to them, often they think its disrespect or even racism, but I'm convinced that 95% of the time its just wanting to practice or, in the case of employees, their job description requires them to deal with people in English.
I don't really think it's the same at all. In Japan people assume you don't speak Japanese and that's why they don't use Japanese with you--it takes some time to convince people that you can actually handle Japanese.
In the situation in Hawaii, everyone assumes that a given person can speak English, so that's obviously not the motivation behind using Japanese with someone.
The underlying idea in Japan is that Japanese people speak Japanese, and that white people and similarly obvious gaikokujin cannot. It's because most people in Japan don't think of Japaneseness as seperated into nationality, culture, and race; it's all seen as being the same thing. So if someone who is not Japanese by race has acquired some aspects of Japanese culture (language, way of acting, etc), people are surprised since usually nationality, culture, and race usually go together when it comes to Japaneseness.
American-ness, on the other hand, is usually thought of in terms of nationality and culture (race also plays something of a role)--and culture, nationality, and race are thought of as different things in America. (Similarly to how people distinguish between Jewish culture, religious Jewishness, and the Jews as a people).
I don't think that the way gaikokujin are treated in Japan when it comes to language is racist; but I think it's certainly a different thing than what may happen to a Japanese in Hawaii, and you could certainly make a better case for it being racist if you were so inclined.
Edited: 2010-08-02, 2:25 am