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July 1, 2011

Japan’s Nuke Plant “Amusement” Centers: Hello Kitty Meets Alice in Wonderland

Shika Nuke Visitor Center NYT

Here in Shika, more than 100,000 guests last year visited the P.R. building where Alice discovers the wonders of nuclear power. The Caterpillar reassures Alice about radiation and the Cheshire Cat helps her learn about the energy source. Instead of going down a rabbit hole, Alice shrinks after eating a candy and enters a 1:25 scale model of the Shika nuclear plant nearby. — from: ‘Safety Myth’ Left Japan Ripe for Nuclear Crisis (NYT)

How did they do it? How did Japan build an air-tight “safety myth” around nuclear power? At the core, if you’ll pardon the pun, it involved a collusion between industry and government. From there, it was years of PR.

Last week’s NYT story elaborates the strategy and resulting mindset. The photos and slideshow, though, throw their own light on the veneer, both in symbolism, and in the real trappings at Japan’s nuke plant visitor centers.

Things have come a long way since Reddy Kilowatt. In the “welcome photo” above, a matrix of teenage energy, Hello Kitty and origami energize the amusement park motif as infantilization and fantasy provide a candy-coated experience within the Shika plant.

Japan Nuke power safety myth Alice in Wonderland

Once inside, what a curious mix in this Alice in Wonderland display. As the cloying video plays inside the tree, I can’t help but appreciate the irony here: this tiny member of the public might as well be another mushroom. And then, might the odd, even phallic caterpillar perched on one of those mushrooms hint at the not-so-childlike power and danger just beyond these walls?

(photo: Ko Sasaki for The New York Times)

  • bks

    Hello Kitty should have three eyes and no ears, I think.

        –bks

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1797864456 Cheryl Jensen Wolff

    well thats it nothing wrong here now we can move on and talk about sara palin

  • Anonymous

    World of Tomorrow is a documentary that fascinates me. Its subject is the 1939 World Fair in N.Y. As I recall the largest exhibit was GM’s, featuring a tracked ride around a scale model of GM’s vision of a future U.S. Lots of multi-lane superhighways criss-crossing the nation, traversed by GM dream cars.

    I live about an hour northeast of Epcot. The exhibits there are sponsored mostly by foreign nations and multinational corporations. They immerse visitors in a fantasy environment embodying the sponsor’s self-serving vision of the present and/or future.

    The Creationism Museum was not yet complete last I checked. But, once again, it immerses visitors in the proprietors’ self-serving vision of a fantasy — this time in a vision of a past world where Adam and Eve are pale-skinned Caucasians and children can climb up onto a saddled dinosaur.

    I’ve long thought that one reason Americans were so easily manipulated into accepting the Iraq invasion was that we had been subjected to years of immersion in a vision of the previous Gulf War as remote from reality as the Creationism Museum’s vision of the past millions of years. The imaginary Gulf War Americans came to accept was equivalent to a video game.

    Combat was seen through a radar screen in an airplane. All attacks were properly targeted and truly “surgical.” Rarely was there any “collateral damage,” and what little there was could be blamed on bad guys using civilians as shields. Costs to Americans in life and blood were minimal, and were never shown in their ghastly reality.

    It’s all marketing. The purpose is to delude the potential “customer.” And not infrequently the marketer is equally deluded. We all pay the price.

    (Sorry for going off. This kind of thing really bothers me.)

    • karen h

      Actually, I found your rant pretty interesting. I think there’s a tendency to think only countries like Japan are so swayed. They are just smaller and a lazier microcosm. This country (the US.) has a strong history of being played.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/George-Mokray/767686527 George Mokray

    Here’s a selection of electricity conservation posters from the post-Fukushima Japan:
    http://pinktentacle.com/2011/03/electricity-conservation-posters/

    Videos of picking up the garbage after the tsunami and Tokyo’s lights at night before and after at
    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/07/01/990358/-Japan-Aftermath

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  • Anonymous

    Thanks, Karen. You’re right. I was born in 1942, so I myself have been played often enough that I find it humiliating even to think about it. Alas. Too soon old, too late smart.