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Which detail best shapes the idea that the Japanese art of boat building may be lost to future generations?

excerpt from School of Hard Knots
by Alex Hanson

The typical apprenticeship with a Japanese traditional boatbuilder lasts six years, during which an apprentice can expect to spend a lot of time sweeping the shop floor and sharpening tools while watching the master ply his trade. Work is conducted in silence, questions are answered elliptically, if at all, and, by the end, the master will have withheld key pieces of knowledge that the apprentice is expected to acquire through guile or outright theft.
Even in Japan, where traditional crafts are revered, this system is too grueling, too much at odds with modern life, to survive. It is no wonder, then, that as a generation of Japanese boatwrights has retired, their knowledge has retired with them. Vermont boatbuilder Douglas Brooks is trying to ensure that the centuries-old designs for fishing boats and water taxis don't follow these craftsmen to the grave.
For more than two decades, Brooks has researched traditional boatmaking in Japan, and has done short, nontraditional apprenticeships to record boat designs. Ordinarily, no Westerner would have a hope of learning in a few weeks what usually takes years of patient observation to acquire.
This article was first published in May/June 2013 issue of Humanities, which is published by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Respuesta :

Answer:

The detail that best shapes the idea that the Japanese art of boat building can be lost to future generations can be seen in the lines:

"Even in Japan, where traditional crafts are revered, this system is too grueling, too much at odds with modern life, to survive. It is no wonder, then, that as a generation of Japanese boatwrights has retired, their knowledge has retired with them. "

Explanation:

The text above shows how the Japanese art of boat building is carried out through a slow process, with years of study and learning, where it is necessary to have a lot of patience and be very observant to learn. This passivity and slowness that the Japanese art of boat building presents, does not match the modern and dynamic world in which we live today. This made less people interested in this art, for this reason, when a boat builder retires, he doesn't leave anyone in his place and all his work and knowledge retires too. Over time, all boat builders will be retired, which will cause this art to be lost through the generations.

Answer: "This system is too grueling, too much at odds with modern life, to survive."