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Home > Culture of Japan


 

1 Japanese culture and language

Japan's isolation until the arrival of the " Black Ships" and the Meiji era produced a culture distinctively different from any other, and echoes of this uniqueness persist today. For example, as Ruth Benedict pointed out in her classic study "The Chrysanthemum and the Sword", Japan has a shame culture (external reference standard) rather than the guilt culture (internal reference standard) that is more familiar in the West. Again in Japan, inter-relationships between people are heavily influenced by "obligation" and "duty" in a way that is no longer true in the more individualistic and free-wheeling West. Finally, generalised conceptions of morality and desirable behaviour are relatively under-developed in Japan, where particular obligations to family, school, and friends tend to guide behaviour.

Because of strong correlation between Japanese culture and language, the Japanese language has always played a significant role in Japanese culture. Nemawashi, for example, indicates consensus achieved through careful preparation. It reflects the harmony that is desired and respected within Japanese culture.

While Japanese are better known for their physical comedy outside of Japan, they have intricate and complex humor and jokes. Because this humor relies so heavily on Japanese language, centuries of cultures, Buddhism-Shinto religion, and ethics, however, they are generally impossible to translate. Here is an example from a simplest form called Dajare (駄洒落) with keywords in bold text.

A: "隣の家にヘイができたんだってね。"
"Tonari no ie ni HEI ga dekita nda tte ne."    
(I heard that a neighbor built a Wooden fence.)
B: "へー"
"HEE"
(Oh, really or Wooden fence, so?)

Dajare relies on the similarity of two different words' pronunciations and relies on the difference of two different words to make someone laugh. There are also "Tonchi" (a clever and funny quiz), "Manzai", "Koudan", "Konto", etc. that similarly relies on intricacies and understanding of the general Japanese culture. Areas around Osaka are in someways worst offenders as people there have taken jokes to the next level with "Boke-Tsukkomi" style. "Boke" is a person who makes an nonsensical and funny connection with words while "Tsukkomi" person literally tries to slap "Boke" awake from muddle of words and back to a talk that makes sense.

2 Clothing

Main article: Japanese clothing ( kimono, hakama, etc...)

3 Creative Arts

3.1 Art and Architecture

Main article: Japanese Art

3.2 Cinema

Main article: Cinema_of_Japan

3.3 Dance

Main article: Japanese traditional dance

3.4 Literature

Main article: Japanese literature

The books, comic books, magazines and newspapers are also a part of the Japanese culture. Even though TV and other entertainment have led to a decline in the time spent reading, book stores are everywhere and public libraries offer a huge store of books. Local municipalities offer reading sessions of writings like ' Genji monogatari' (The Tale of Genji) and poem classes. There are also second hand shops dedicated exclusively to selling used books, magazines, and music software cheaply. The Kanda district in downtown Tokyo has been famous for selling second hand books for over 80 years.



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