I have been so busy of late working on Part 3 generally and on Assignment 3 in particular that I have not until now got round to following up a link provided by my tutor in response to the work I did for Assignment 2. I have now remedied that oversight.
He pointed me in the direction of a short video clip, which is in fact a series of still photos, made by Chris Killip in the Japanese fishing town of Kesennuma shortly after the earthquake and tsunami struck in 2011, and some months later showing some of the clean up and start of recovery. Killip (for whom I have a lot of time, not least simply because of his connections with the North East) took photos every twenty paces along a particular street. This is an approach similar to the one I used, but of which I had not previously been aware, on my train journey, setting the camera to fire every ten seconds. In both our cases the resulting image is not the direct result of a conscious decision but of the operation of a pre-determined process, so the results are almost, but not quite, random.
The resulting work is very moving in its simplicity.
Coincidentally I have just started to read (or is it that I have just been prompted, reminded, to look at this video because I have just done so) Richard Lloyd Parry’s book (2017) about the tsunami. As is not uncommonly the case with my reading, this book has sat on my shelf for a couple of years before I have got round to reading it in earnest. Sometimes books just have to wait until the time is right for them, and more often than not I do not consciously know when that time is until I finally get my nose into it. Kesennuma, the town visited by Killip, is mentioned a few times. Even for Japanese people it is, or was, hardly known; it is not a part of Japan that I know at all – I really only know some of the the area between Tokyo and Kyoto, and the mountains above Nara overlooking the Inland Sea. It is poignant that it should become known now to a wider (but I guess still a fairly narrowly interested public) audience as a result of this tragedy. It also appears on one of the maps in Gretel Ehrlich’s book (2013) (which in contrast I read immediately it came out) but I do not recall that she visited, although she did spend some time nearby: she is more concerned with the people affected by the disaster than with specific locations (places such as Sendai and Fukushima apart – for obvious reasons).
Ehrlich, G, (2013). Facing the Wave: A Journey in the Wake of the Tsunami. New York: Pantheon
Lloyd Parry, R, (2017). Ghosts of the Tsunami. London: Jonathan Cape


