Reliant121 wrote:I'd disagree to India, as when the Empire controlled India, the number of Indian dishes and such like that found their way into England was HUGE. A large proportion of middle to upper class victorian England was fascinated with India.
Aye, maybe a bad example there.
Reliant121 wrote:Of course, it was never as grand as the modern fascination with Japan. But thats purely because media today is an order of magnitude easier to distribute AND obtain.
Which is undoubtedly one of the reasons that this fascination seems so strong. Although Japanese culture is seen as being strange and exotic, it's trivialy simple to obtain something made in Japan or to find out about its culture. The same couldn't be said about India, China or Africa during the height of colonialism.
SolkaTruesilver wrote:I think he reduced the "Western World" to "The US and it's media". It's a common mistake. The U.S. never really had much interest in India, as their sphere of influence never went deep there, as opposed to the U.K.
No, I used the "Western World" in the classical sense - Europe and North America.
Tyyr wrote:Yeah, but so did European swords from time to time.
True, though I was under the impression that Japanese swords were still more prone to snappage than their European counterparts. Am I mistaken?
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