Build it, and they will laugh
We’ve all got problems, but Kenji Kawakami has solutions for problems we never knew we had.
For example, suppose you’re getting ready to prepare a fish for sashimi—particularly one that’s still alive—and you get unnerved by that fish eye staring back at you.
Kawakami’s solution? A fish face cover that slides over the fish head so you can slice in serenity.
Suppose you’re a Japanese housewife whose husband has to get up at 5:00 a.m. Sunday morning to tee off with some customers at a golf course that’s two hours away by car? Kawakami lets you fulfill your wifely duty to see him off in the morning while still asleep by providing an automated waving hand that you can attach to the alarm clock.
These and dozens of other problem solvers are inventions that Kawakami calls chindogu, which means “unusual tools”. A self-described “designer, anarchist, and pathological mail-order enthusiast”, Kawakami is the founder of the International Chindogu Society, which claims 10,000 members.
Another Kawakami term for chindogu is “unuseless inventions”, and I think several circuits in my brain have shut down permanently just by reading it.
Take the plunge and start with this review of Kawakami’s new “Bumper Book of Unuseless Japanese Inventions” that appeared in The Scotsman. (Ignore their claim that chindogu literally means “distorted tools”.)
If you have the nerve to keep going, you should try the website of the International Chindogu Society in English. It has photos of some of these marvels, a few of which were actually shown on TV. (I could not find a Japanese website for this organization.)
If you’re ready for more, you can try this site featuring the Chindogu Manifesto. Number 2 is, “A chindogu must exist”, and declares, “You are not allowed to use a chindogu, but it must be made.
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If you’ve seen the light and want to commune directly with the source, the listing for Kawakami’s books in English at Amazon is here.
“Basically, chindogu is the same as the Industrial Revolution in Britain,” - Kenji Kawakami
[...] n be used. (Why and by whom is a different question altogether.) In contrast, chindogu, as our previous report here notes, are tools with a purpose, but not meant to be used. Does that make th [...]
September 15th, 2005 at 10:11 am[...] If you would like someone else´s opinion about this subject, check out this site: http://japundit.com/archives/2005/01/27/43/ [...]
September 10th, 2008 at 9:03 pm