PDA

View Full Version : 'Paris Syndrome' strikes Japanese



Fortis in Arduis
06-13-2011, 09:24 AM
A dozen or so Japanese tourists a year have to be repatriated from the French capital, after falling prey to what's become known as "Paris syndrome".

That is what some polite Japanese tourists suffer when they discover that Parisians can be rude or the city does not meet their expectations.

The experience can apparently be too stressful for some and they suffer a psychiatric breakdown.

Around a million Japanese travel to France every year.

Shocking reality

Many of the visitors come with a deeply romantic vision of Paris - the cobbled streets, as seen in the film Amelie, the beauty of French women or the high culture and art at the Louvre.

The reality can come as a shock.

An encounter with a rude taxi driver, or a Parisian waiter who shouts at customers who cannot speak fluent French, might be laughed off by those from other Western cultures.

But for the Japanese - used to a more polite and helpful society in which voices are rarely raised in anger - the experience of their dream city turning into a nightmare can simply be too much.

This year alone, the Japanese embassy in Paris has had to repatriate four people with a doctor or nurse on board the plane to help them get over the shock.


An encounter with a rude Parisian can be a shocking experience
They were suffering from "Paris syndrome".

It was a Japanese psychiatrist working in France, Professor Hiroaki Ota, who first identified the syndrome some 20 years ago.

On average, up to 12 Japanese tourists a year fall victim to it, mainly women in their 30s with high expectations of what may be their first trip abroad.

The Japanese embassy has a 24-hour hotline for those suffering from severe culture shock, and can help find hospital treatment for anyone in need.

However, the only permanent cure is to go back to Japan - never to return to Paris.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/6197921.stm

Quelle dommage... :D

Aces High
06-13-2011, 10:34 AM
Parisian waiter who shouts at customers who cannot speak fluent French, might be laughed off by those from other Western cultures.


Not laughed off,but if those Parisian waiters are so superior,then how come im sat down doing the ordering and they are running about waiting on me hand and foot.
Thats the way i look at it.

Grumpy Cat
06-13-2011, 10:43 AM
Wow. Japanese immigrants get along fine here in Canada. Mind you, waiters or cab drivers don't yell at people here, they'll get fired if they do. We have a "the customer's always right" mentality.

But we have no problem yelling at people when we are not on the job. Our work personalities are different from our normal ones (my co-workers were surprised when they met me outside of work, even, since I am a metalhead who wears a lot of leather and band shirts :lol: but I am buttoned down at work).

BeerBaron
06-13-2011, 10:48 AM
We get a lot of Japanese tourists that come up here to see the Northern Lights and they are always the most polite people I have ever met, leave it up to the French to offend the most polite people on the planet with their incessant snobbery :rolleyes:

Albion
06-13-2011, 11:17 AM
I suppose the fetish a lot of whites have for Asia is repeated in Asia, a lot of East Asians like all thing s European. Its because both parties see the other as exotic, interesting and "new" and want to know about the other.
Just look at all the Japanese tourists in Britain visiting the Old English villages and country houses in the Cotswolds, I suppose its new to them and they're drawn to it as a positive stereotype of how they perceive England.