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Since Dec. 1998, major league baseball player Mark McGwire, who slammed a record 70 home runs for the St. Loius Cardinals in the past season, starts appearing in TV commercials and magazine ads for Konica's new Centuria color negative film.
On Feb. 3, Minolta Co. President Osamu Kanaya announces that it will post its first sales and profit losses in five years for the current fiscal year ending on March 31. The company expects sales to drop by 2.1 percent from the preceding year to 295 billion yen and a pretax profit drop of 10 percent to 11.6 billion yen.
On Feb. 23, the Supreme Court upholds lower court rulings supporting customs inspectors who forbid a Tokyo company president from importing into Japan a photo book by the late Robert Mapplethorpe. The Court's five-judge No. 3 petty bench deemed the book obscene because it contained photos "emphasizing male genitals." Justices Yukinobu Ozaki and Toshifumi Motohara, the two judges in the minority, supported the plaintiff's view that opinions can vary on what is obscene. They said, "Ideas about obscenity have changed widely," in reference to the display of pubic hair in magazines in Japan. "It is virtual censorship, which is prohibited by the Constitution, for customs inspectors to unilaterally examine books whose level of obscenity cannot be easily agreed upon." "It is not easy for customs inspectors, who are not judicial experts, to decide what is obscene and what is not."
The plaintiff bought the book in the U.S. and shipped it to Japan in Aug. 1992. But the Tokyo Customhouse prohibited its import into Japan saying it can "corrupt public morals." The company president filed a lawsuit against the customhouse and government to cancel the ban. He declared that Mapplethorpe's works were recognized as highly artistic and since the book was to be for his personal appreciation, it should not cause any harm to public morals. Ironically, the book in question has been sold in Japan. In Dec. 1984, the Supreme Court ruled that it was constitutional for customs inspectors to ban imports of magazines because of their obscenity. Justice Itsuo Sonobe, who was in the majority opinion, stated in a supplementary opinion that the import ban should not apply to photos "already on display at famous museums and contained in a catalog that is widely sold, and if the purpose of the import is clearly for personal use." (Editor's note: Always remember that Japan is a country full of contradictions and irony.)
In April, a daguerreotype portrait of Lord SHIMAZU Nariakira taken by ICHIKI Shiro in 1857 is designated as an "Important Cultural Property" by the Japanese government. It was the first photograph in Japan to be so designated. The photo is thought to be the oldest surviving daguerreotype taken by a Japanese photographer. It was discovered in 1975 by the Shimazu family in a warehouse.
From April 17 to July 4, ARAKI Nobuyoshi holds his first solo exhibition organized by a public museum (Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo) in Japan. Titled "ARAKI Nobuyoshi: Sentimental Photography, Sentimental Life," the exhibition takes full advantage of the museum's huge exhibition space. The exhibition starts with photos of his honeymoon with wife Yoko taken from "Sentimental Journey." Then you see many poster-size photos of flowers, nude married women, male company workers, and other subjects gracing the museum's huge walls. A huge pillar is also plastered with hundreds of Polaroid shots. Over 1,000 photos from Araki's 22 major series are shown in the museum located in Kiba Park (Koto Ward), Tokyo.
On May 3, Time magazine issues a special double issue titled "Young Japan" for its Asia edition. The issue focuses on Japan's youth with articles mainly about fads, fashion, and trends. One of the articles, titled "Snap Shots," gave 85 Japanese teenagers in Tokyo and Wakayama city the opportunity to photograph their daily routine with single-use (called "disposable" in the article) cameras provided by the magazine. Out of the 2,700 photos the magazine received, only 25 were published on four pages. The photos were mostly of family, friends, pets, food, and random scenes. The article concluded that they found a "refreshing overall innocence."
On May 18, a bill banning child prostitution and child pornography is enacted and approved by the Lower House of the National Diet. Besides prohibiting Japanese from going on overseas child sex tours and engaging in "enjo kosai" (sex with a minor [17 or younger] for money or gifts), the law bans the manufacture, sale, and distribution of obscene photographs, videos, and Internet images. The law is designed to help crack down on child pornography on the Internet. Distributing or selling child pornography invites a punishment of up to three years in prison or a fine up to 3 million yen. The law applies to crimes committed in Japan and to Japanese nationals overseas. The law took effect later in the year on Nov. 1.
On the same day, the Publishing Ethics Council released a statement saying that the new law banning child prostitution and child pornography may lead to censorship of publishers. Since the law defines child pornography in vague terms, the council feared that authorities could very well restrict and punish the sale and distribution of certain art or photography books. (The new law defines child pornography as pictures, videos, and other visual materials showing sexual intercourse and related activities with minors.) The council urged the government to be careful not to violate the freedom of speech and the publication rights of citizens when implementing and interpreting the new law. The council is comprised of the Japan Magazine Publishers Association, Japan Book Publishers Association, Japan Publication Wholesalers Association, and the Japan Federation of Commercial Cooperatives of Bookstores.
The latest fad among high school girls is Heaven's Passport. This is a passport-size notebook with spaces for 100 Print Club-type photo stickers. Each time the passport owner does a good deed like picking up litter, she affixes a photo sticker in her Heaven's Passport. When it is filled with 100 photo stickers, her dream is to come true.
Focus magazine (published by Shinchosha) publishes a grainy photo of a grinning Masumi Hayashi escorted by guards at her first courtroom appearance in Nov. 1998 despite protests from her attorney. (Taking pictures during courtroom proceedings is banned in Japan.) The accompanying article is titled, "First-time court trial for Masumi jeering at the court." Hayashi was accused of poisoning a vat of curry with arsenic killing four people and sickening over 60 at a local festival in Sonobe, Wakayama Pref. in July 1998. She later decides to file a libel suit against the publisher.
On June 9, the Osaka District Court ordered publisher Shinchosha to pay 2.5 million yen in damages to to a 20-year-old man for publishing his name and photo in the March 1998 issue of monthly magazine Shincho 45. The man had been indicted for murdering a 5-year-old girl allegedly committed in Jan. 1998 while he was still a minor at age 19. He also allegedly stabbed and seriously injured the girl's mother and a high school girl. During his criminal trial, he admitted guilt, but his lawyers claimed temporary insanity because he sniffed paint thinner the night before. According to the Juvenile Law, the identity of arrested criminals and suspects under 20 years old must be withheld by the press. The magazine's chief editor, Takashi Ishii, said that the ruling went against common sense because compensation (originally 22 million yen) was demanded by a man who allegedly killed a young girl. The court's decision to award money to such a man should not be accepted, said Ishii. He added that the decision to publish the names and photos of minors should be up to journalists, and that the Juvenile Law does not stipulate any penalties for violators. The publisher plans to appeal.
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