Japan: The Strange Country
Kabuki, GDP, and speech-free storytelling that leaves you speechless.
By Maria Popova
Last week, we saw and loved Japan: The Strange Country — a wonderful student project presenting Japan’s numbers and figures in a brilliant infographic animation. In the past few days, the film got a decent amount of press. But today, something strange happened: The English version of the animation was taken down, leaving only the Japanese one.
Out of curiosity, we gave the Japanese version a spin and were astounded to realize it was just as brilliant, despite the foreign voiceover — just as crisp, just as digestible, just as informationally revelational. And we thought this was the true litmus test for excellent infographic visualization: Using design and visual narrative as a storytelling device in a way that makes the data so intuitive and clear that it renders language unnecessary.
See for yourself.
So for your next encounter with infoviz, consider this: If you took language away, would it still make sense and tell a story?
—
Published April 2, 2010
—
https://www.themarginalian.org/2010/04/02/japan-this-strange-country/
—

ABOUT
CONTACT
SUPPORT
SUBSCRIBE
Newsletter
RSS
CONNECT
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
Tumblr