Japanese 250     Winter 2010
Daily Notes

Ready For Spring 2009: Ideally, this section will be updated following each class.


[Week 1] [Week 2] [Week 3] [Week 4] [Week 5 ] [Week 6] [Week 7] [Weeks 8-10]

 

WEEK 1. NOTES - Now Updated For 2010 up to the dotted line.

The Japanese language is …

* High Context
* Listener Centered
* Utilizes event framing

The Japanese culture we are examining is …

- Unspoken and adhered to by native speakers
- For the most part invisible

Language in any society reflects the unwritten structures of any culture. We just happen to be studying the structures and meanings inherent in Japanese.

Culture: What do we mean by culture in this class? - The unspoken aspects of Japanese communication and the Japanese lifestyle today and in the past that is crucial to understanding Japanese thought and behavior accurately today.

How Well Do You Know Japan?

1. What are the four largest cities (metropolitan areas) in Japan?
2. What is the name of the current prime minister?
3. What is the current exchange rate between the USD and the JY?
4. What is Japan’s state religion? Do commoners really practice this religion?
5. What is Golden Week?
6. What are Japan’s ethnic minorities?
7. Name one famous Japanese athlete in any sport.
8. When does English language education begin in Japanese schools?
9. What do Japanese Think of America and Americans in general?
10. What do Americans think of Japan and Japanese in general?

Week 1. BOPJCs: Basic Operating Principles of Japanese Culture

1. Honne
2. Tatemae
3. Gaman
4. Wa
5. Ningenkankei

Top 10 Things To Know About Japan In the New Millennium

10. JAPAN IS NOT A SMALL COUNTRY
09. JAPAN IS NOT EXOTIC
08. JAPAN IS DIFFERENT
07. IN JAPAN, SOCIETY IS PRIMARY
06. JAPANESE NATIONAL IDENTITY IS STRONG
05. CHANGE IN JAPAN TENDS TO BE INCREMENTAL
04. JAPAN STANDS AT AN UNPRECEDENTED MOMENT IN HISTORY
03. JAPAN IS RE-ORIENTING
02. JAPAN IS A GLOBAL POWER
01. NOT TO KNOW ABOUT JAPAN IS NO LONGER AN OPTION

* Images of samurai and sumo wrestlers, of geisha and cherry blossom, should not mislead: Japan is no exotic lotusland...

* One of the international challenges for Japan is simultaneously to "re-orient" without turning its back on the West; it has now to fact in all directions at once.

 

Example of “Even Framing.”

The greeting at the beginning and end of class.

Opening speech to open an Enkai and the the single clap method used in class today to close an enkai.

Bowing when meeting someone and bowing when saying goodbye.

 


WEEK 2. NOTES - Now Updated For 2010 up to the dotted line.

Week 2. BOPJCs

6. Proper Form Valued Over Function or Economy
7. Sekinin: Responsibility
8 . Shinyo: Trust
9 . Uchi/Soto: Inside/Outside distinctions
10. Enryo: Reserve, lack of confidence, modesty, humility

Japanese Geography: Cities to know the locations of.

1. Sapporo

2. Morioka

3. Tokyo

4. Yokohama

 

Example of Bowing. * We didn't have a chance to talk about this in class on 4/12, but I'm keeping this in the notes. Bowing properly is another example of "Form over Function."

Bowing, called ojigi in Japanese, is a form of communication valued highly among Japanese people. Basically, there are four types as indicated below. The use of proper form when bowing enhances interpersonal communication. Foreigners are not expected to bow like Japanese, but knowing proper bowing etiquette will help foreigners to understand a whle new dimension of Japanese communication. The use of proper etiquette when bowing only enhances a foreigners perceived communicative competence in the Japanese language.

* See class handout for sketches and types of bows. (Know the name, angle, and duration of the two kinds of bows we practiced in class.

 

Conceptual Tools For Understanding A New Culture Part 1.

Culture: Shared patterns of thoughts, beliefs and behaviors constituting the total lifeway of a people. Material products and behavioral patterns prevalent in a culture offer one good way to learn about the cognitive patterns that characterize that culture.

Worldview: An individual’s characteristic way of perceiving, interpreting, and explaining the world. A worldview can be held collectively at a societal level as well.

Ethnocentrism: The tendency to see one’s own culture as central (and even superior) to other cultures, and as the measure or standard against which all other life-ways are evaluated.

Variation: There will always be a great range and variation in the behaviors, expressions, and thoughts of people of a certain speech community that must be understood and recognized.

Stereotype: A fixed or conventional notion about a culture, its people, and/or its language community.

 

Make sure you can cite each of these three. Proper execution of the Meishi Rules can facilitate in-group membership.

Meishi (Business Card) Rules

1. Meishi represents the face of the company and its employees.

2. When Meishi are exchanged, (the business card of your counterpart) should always be left out (in plain view).

3. Meishi are to be put away quietly (and discretely) with other documents.

 

The Cultural Matrix of Social Inclusion In Japan

The Practice of Japanese Conventions In Japan With Japanese People Is Important Because.....

a) Doing so makes Japanese feel that you respect their cultural ways, leading to their respect of you.

b) Their respect for your willingness to do things the Japanese way (if executed proficiently) leads to trust.

c) This trust is a necessary aspect of allowing Japanese to allow you into in-group membership, giving you privy to honne, the key to any long lasting relationship of any kind - whether personal or institutional.


WEEK 3. NOTES - Now Updated For 2010 up to the dotted line.

Main Domestic Issues Japan is currently struggling with:

1. Where to relocate portions of Camp Futenma, one of many U. S. Military installations currently located near a densely populated residential area near Naha, Okinawa Prefecture. Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama made the relocation of this entire camp outside of Japan one of his major campaign promises when running for P. M. last year. If he can't deliver, he may have to resign. President Obama and the U. S. Gov. are sympathetic, but think the base needs to remain (even if split up) inside of Japan.

Japanese Geography: Cities to know the locations of.

1. Nagoya

2. Kyoto

3. Osaka

4. Kobe

Week 3. BOPJCs

11. The Practice of Indebtedness In Social Relations
- Care taking: The ability to take care of people
- To be taken care of: The ability to be taken care of
12. Isshin Denshin/ Sasshi: Japanese “telepathy.” Communication without words.
13. The Outside Reflects the Inside: Change occurs from the outside in. The surface state reflects the inner state.
14. Individualized Conformity: The nail that sticks up and gets pounded down comes in many sizes and colors.
15. The Importance of Apology: Signifies the willingness to take responsibility for something. Responsibility is related to care taking – taking care and being taken care of.
16. Sempai/Kohai Relations: “Senior” – “Junior” relations at school, in the company, in the neighborhood, in life (not in the family).

Learning to See the Gray: Etic/ Emic Analysis

The field of cultural anthropology emerged from the study of linguistics.

Phonetics = etic analysis: an attempt to understand language and culture meaningful to the outside observer; to interpret data according to a system of analysis that is independent of and external to the native system.

Phonemics = emic analysis: an attempt to understand language and culture from the native perspective; understanding patterns of speech and behavior meaningful to members of the society being studied.

Emic/ Etic Analysis

* See the class handout for the schematic portrayal of the etic/emic overlap. Understand the basic concept behind Emic/ Etic Analysis. Be able to describe where Davidson, Feiler, Kriska, and Horbat are in this schematic, and why we are using this approach to understand Japanese culture in JPC 250.

* Understanding cultural and linguistic reality must include both etic and emic perspectives.

The purpose of JPC 250 is to introduce the Japanese worldview that reveals the dynamics of Japan’s emic culture in a way that transcends ethnocentrism . One way this is accomplished is by contrasting etic and emic perspectives on Japanese culture. Another way is to introduce variation within Japan’s supposedly homogeneous language, culture and society.

The Japanese Education System
To put Feiler’s experience into perspective:

* Japan began experiencing large scale educational reform in the 1980s that continues to this day.
- Defusing of educational credentialing.
- Emphasis on lifelong learning.
- Better integration of experiential learning opportunities in schools.

* Middle school is the last bastion of Japan’s postwar education system that was a part of some of the stereotypes of Japanese schools.
- Examination Hell
- Emphasis on memorization over proficiency.
- An emphasis on technical accuracy over functionality.

What Caused the educational reforms that continue in the present?

* The realization that all of the sacrifice wasn’t paying off.
* The advancing age of the general population.
* The bursting of the economic bubble in the mid 1990s.
* Changing place of Japan in the global village.

Kato Hidetoshi
- Japanese sociologist.
- Written extensively on cultural differences between the Japan and the U. S.
- Expert on American regionalism and the study of race and culture.

Kato Hidetoshi's Advice Concerning American Communication From A Japanese Viewpoint:

* Be prepared to reproduce 3 of these in writing on the quiz:

1. Magic words in the USA are – Yes and No. Use these words skillfully accompanied with please and thank you.
2. Be courteous to members of the opposite sex.
3. Make direct eye contact and smile when talking.
4. Consider people as individuals first – as a part of their work, social, or family group second.
5. Shake hand firmly, not holding on too long.
6. In conversation, get right to the point.
7. In the U. S., too much formality may be bad, especially in the Midwest. Try to move from formal to informal in interpersonal relations as soon as you can.
8. American society is one in which individualism and independence is highly regarded at the personal, institutional, and societal level.
9. American society is very heterogeneous as compared to Japan. Be careful not to generalize too much about the people, culture, and practices of Americans.
10. On the other hand, mainstream culture is what unifies the people. Look for these unifying characteristics and pay attention to them. (Mom, baseball, Apple Pie, Thanksgiving, etc.)

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WEEK 4. NOTES - Now Updated For 2010 up to the dotted line.

The Japanese Writing System: Three Kinds of Writing.

1. Hiragana: A phonetic syllabary used to "spell" words of Japanese origin and certain parts of speech (grammar).

2. Katakana: A phonetic syllabary used to "spell" words of a non-Japanese origin including names.

3. Kanji: A symbolic writing system that represents a meaning and a certain pronunciation.

How Written Japanese represent Wk 4 BOPJCs.

Kanji characters were borrowed from Chinese and adopted to fit the sounds and grammar of spoken Japanese. Hiragana (invented by Murasaki Shikibu - a woman) and Katakana (invented by Japanese Buddhist priests) to represent spoken Japanese phonetically. Though Japanese uses Chinese characters, these characters were indigenized. Therefore, kanji character, hiragana and katakana (all based originally on Chinese writing) which equal something different from the original, operate synchronously to enable Japanese to represent their language in writing.

Map 4. Be prepared to locate the following Japanese cities on a map like the one distributed in class:

* Utsunomiya, Hiroshima, Fukuoka, Nagasaki, and Naha

Week 4. BOPJCs

Embodied by the Japanese language, in Japanese culture, and in Japanese thought and behavior:

21. Cultural Borrowing: The ability to take structures outside itself and incorporate it within, creating an indigenous system different from any single borrowed quality.
22. Cultural Synchronicity: Several cultural and religious influences operating simultaneously, each of which becomes something different from the original.
23. Cultural Adaptation: The ability to adopt a variety of influences that in their places of origin might not go together at all, and making them work together to form a cohesive whole.

The Social Dynamics of Apology
* Apologizing is the outward form of taking responsibility (Sekinin)
* In a society that places a very high value on proper form in all things, the proper practice of Indebtedness (care-taking and care-giving) requires a willingness to take responsibility.
* The taking of responsibility in any relationship whether care-taking or care-giving requires the willingness to apologize, even if one is not at fault.
* There are HEAVY apologies and LIGHT apologies.
* All LIGHT apologies should be reciprocated with a LIGHT apology. This action-response sequence demonstrates sincerity on the part of both parties and facilitates wa (harmony) that is counted on as the foundation of normal social interaction in Japanese society.

* HEAVY apologies don't require reciprocity. HEAVY apologies are serious and are only accepted over time if the offending behavior is changed.

* Be able to write your name in Japanese for the for Quiz 4, either in katakana, or if you are from an Asian country that uses kanji, in kanji.

The Importance of BOPJCs
BOPJCs > Played out in situations = Jpn Culture
BOPJCs are “played out” in = “Scripts” or “Stories.”
* The more Japanese cultural scripts and stories you become familiar with, the better prepared you are to understand Japanese culture.
* When trying to understand (and communicate in) a high context language (and culture) like Japanese, the knowledge of BOPJCs and Cultural Scripts and Stories is MUCH MORE ESSENTIAL than in low context languages and cultures.
* This is why Japanese culture can be understood w/o speaking the language.
But… this is also why…
* Authentic (native sounding) Japanese cannot be spoken accurately without knowledge of Japanese culture (BOPJCs, scripts, and stories).


Final Thoughts For Week 4: We didn't talk about this in class yet, but very important.

To understand contemporary Japan, one should start with traditional Japan. This is because many of the BOPJCs that were prevalent then are still prevalent now,
they are just more hidden under the facade of modernization and Westernization. Most Japanese and non-Japanese social scientists would agree that Japanese culture hasn't really changed that much in the last 200 years.

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WEEK 5. NOTES - Now Updated For 2010 up to the dotted line.

The Science of BOPJCs
- BOPJCs occur within Scripts and Stories individually and in various configurations.
- Some BOPJCs occur more frequently than others.
- Some BOPJCs can occur by themselves, others occur in pairs or even larger configurations.
- Figuring out which scripts and stories require which BOPJCs is the science of BOPJCs.
- It is possible to predict the use of BOPJCs and to predict which ones are most likely to appear.
- Interpreting the use of BOPJCs is usually never right nor wrong but should be thought of as more or less elegant.

Week 5. BOPJCs
24. Contraditction:
Behavior and thinking that seems to contradict other BOPJCs and other “Japanese-style” ways of doing things. Sometimes this is purposeful in order to “let off steam” or to “let one’s hair down.” At other times its unconscious when on an outer orbit from Japanese culture.
25. The Ability to Negotiate: Not in a business oriented way, but using BOPJCs as a framework.
26. Junansei: Flexibility. The skill of adjusting yourself to the situation in relation to social expectation.
27. Gambaru: An extension of gaman. To gaman is to gambaru. Gaman is the endurance part, gambaru is the perseverance part.
28. Tsukiai: The glue that holds social relationships together – the obligatory participation in in-group social activity. The need to support consociates no matter what.

Golden Week In Japan
The Golden Week is a collection of four national holidays within seven days. In combination with well-placed weekends, the Golden Week becomes one of Japan's three busiest holiday seasons.
Golden Week In Context:
* Large Scale Group Oriented Down-time built into the annual national social cycle
New Years – January
- spring festivals
Golden Week – May
- festivals of summer
Obon (Ancestor’s Homecoming) – August
- Festivals of autumn
New Years – December
* Many other cultural celebrations in-between

Characteristics of Golden Week

- Chance to spend time with family members
- Chance to make memories with family and friends
- Chance to break from convention and do goofy things
- Chance to contradict convention
- Eases the rigors of normal life
- Compliments Small Scale Custom Down-time experiences such as enkai, trips to hot springs, after hours socializing, and pre and post gatherings that are a part of an individual’s life.

During Golden Week
Trains, airports and sightseeing spots get very crowded during Golden Week, and accommodation in tourist areas are booked out well in advance. Foreign visitors are advised to avoid traveling to Japan during the Golden Week.
During most years, the weekends were favorably placed so that most people can enjoy at least five continuous days off. Therefore, Golden Week is usually a popular time for domestic and international travel.
The national holidays making up the Golden Week are:
* April 29
Green Day (Midori no hi):
April 29 used to be the birthday of Emperor Showa who died in the year 1989. After his death, the day was changed into a national holiday for environment and nature since the emperor loved nature.
* May 3
Constitution Day (Kenpo kinenbi):
On this day in 1947, the new post war constitution was put into effect.
* May 4
"Between Day" (Kokumin no kyujitsu):
A recently introduced, national holiday to make the Golden Week a continuous holiday.
* May 5
Children's Day (Kodomo no hi):
The Boy's Festival (Tango no Sekku) is celebrated on this day. Families pray for the health and future success of their sons by hanging up carp streamers and displaying samurai dolls, both symbolizing strength, power and success in life. The Girl's Festival, is celebrated on March 3.

The Japanese Family In Daily Life
* Japanese tend to think of their nuclear family from the perspective of its youngest member.
Mother’s role:
1) Manages the household.
2) In charge of the family’s Ningen Kankei, tsukiai, sewa –giving, and BOPJC facilitation in the Uchi domain.
* Responsible for the children’s education (kyoiku mama, relationship with
school and teachers, etc).
* Responsible for neighborhood and community relations.
* Responsible for kin relations.
Family Relations:
1) Relationship between husband and wife is close.
2) Outward expression of affection between family members by Western standards is minimal unless…
* Often emotion between family members is shown through exaggerated
tatemae.
Fathers:
1) Biggest role is to model responsibility in all areas of life to uphold personal integrity as well as the family name.
2) In charge of the family’s ningen Kankei, tsukiai, sewa –giving, and
BOP JC facilitation in the Soto domain.
* This responsibility causes fathers to be away from home more than they
like.
Teachers:
1) Is the main moral and educational authority in a child and his/her family’s life.
2) Has a personal relationship with each family especially during jr. high but also later (onshi: one’s mentor in studies and in life.)
3) Lifelong association with teachers.
Grandparents:
1) Three generation households used to be the norm but not anymore.
2) Because of increasing life expectancy, grandparents are experiencing a new role as active teachers of tradition in their family members’ lives.

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Current Events in May 2009.

1. Sumo wrestler Wakakirin (legal name Suzukawa Shinichi), rank, Tsunatori, is banned from sumo for life by the Japan Sumo Association when marijuana was found in his Sumo Stable room and he tested positive on a subsequent drug test. Suzukawa surprised the sumo world by publically announcing that he would forgo the over $50,000 severance package he is legally allowed to have in order to demostrate his sincere understanding of the seriousness of the crime.
2. The first week of February marks the peak of the Jr. High entrance examination period. In Japan’s bad economy, test takers at private institutions are 4 times higher than normal due to the cost of public institutions (that have more presteige). February is also the period when the suicide rate increases nationally for both students and the general population due in part to the stresses of examination hell and because of it being the end of Japan’s fiscal year.
3. In an economic climate in which Sony, Panasonic and most of Japan’s electronics firms, as well as Japan’s top auto manufacturers such as Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Mazda, and Mitsubishi are experiencing severe economic setbacks, there is one company that is actually turning a profit. This company is McDonlad’s Japan, the popular hamburger chain, originally from North America. McDonald’s is enjoying its 5th straight year of double digit profits, improving sales by 25% over last year. McDonald’s Japan’s success is attributed to its 100 Yen menu that appeals to students and housewives. Suntory, a beer brewer is also increasing profits in the bad economy. The winning concept seems to be “value.”

The Anatomy of Human Relations In Daily Life
The Anatomy of out-group relations:
Ningen Kankei: Social relations; the practice of cultural customs and conventions (BOPJCs) at the tatemae level.

The Anatomy of in-group relations:
Tsukiai: social relations; the practice of cultural customs and conventions at the personal (honne) level. One must exercise and reciprocate all BOPJCs appropriately in a way that reflects sempai/kohai, on/giri, amae, and gender relationships.
Sewa: care taking – people must be able to care-take and be cared-for in a way that exercises and reciprocates all BOPJCs appropriately in a way that reflects sempai/kohai, on/giri, amae, and gender relationships.

The Anatomy of family-member relations:
Ningen Kankei, Tsukiai, and Sewa are magnified to a personal level in the context of BOPJCs to a magnitude equaled in no other relationships in Japanese life.


WEEK 6. NOTES - Now Updated For 2010 up to the dotted line.

Week 6 BOPJCS

29. Attention to Detail: Copying aspects of other culture so meticulously that the detail and quality of the Japanese version is equal or even superior to the original.

Japanese Spousal Relations:

1) Relationship between husband and wife is typically close, but this closeness is expressed in a way difficult to gage by Western standards.

2) Outward expression of affection between family members in a Japanese family is minimal by Western standards, but this doesn’t mean that individuals don’t care deeply about one another. The degree to which each cares about the others is apparent in certain situations.

3) It is difficult to gage the true nature of a Japanese couple’s feelings for one another by Western standards. Often emotions between husbandsand wives are shown through exaggerated tatemae.

4) It is not considered appropriate for husbands to dote on wives and vice-versa, so in public each typically talks the other down. But this is just an act.

5) In comparison to Westerners, Japanese like to hold their personal feelings inside themselves, letting emotions out only sparingly. While this may not be so true during the honeymoon period of a marriage, it becomes more so as time goes on.6) Japanese husbands and Japanese wives take their roles seriously, letting their hair down most during weekends and family gatherings

Squelching the Stereotype of Japanese Women

Contrary to what Westerners think…..

a. Japanese women are not subservient to men.
b. Japanese women are not second-class citizens in Japanese society.
c. Japanese men and women are situated in their society in a way different from what Westerners are familiar with.

Characteristics of Japanese Family Women

I. The role of women in Japan is often misunderstood by Westerners.
a. Lack of information about women in Japan.
b. No women’s movement or overt feminism.
c. Yet, the lifestyle of Japanese women is changing in Japan.
d. Women in Japan are more free and more independent than ever.
e. The women of the Post WWII. generation have set the stage for the future.
II. A Key Concept - Equality
a. Japanese women don’t seek equality on principle.
b. Part time working women and full-time housewives consider themselves equal to their professionally or vocationally employed husbands at least as far as their status in the household.
c. Husbands willingly admit their dependence on women.
d. Women control the household purse strings. This fosters high esteem because the ability to manage the family has historically been considered essential to prosperity in society. In this regard, women have the central responsibility.
e. Women typically believe that it is they who draw the domestic and professional boundaries within which their husbands move.
f. A – E are often characterized by the saying:
dansei joi, josei yui
(men superior, women dominant)

III. Japanese Women: Yesterday and today

a. 15 years ago, a typical 35 year old woman was most likely a professional housewife who devoted her life to serving the needs of her husband and children. Her role was clearly and narrowly defined.
b. Today, women’s roles are not so clearly defined.
i. Women are likely to be single, married, living with a partner, or divorced; to have children or be childless, to be working part or full time.
ii. She is also likely to be a person who seeks fulfillment and devotes herself to personal as well as family goals which include a variety of options.
iii. The aging of Japanese Society and the nation’s population
decline has put women in an unprecedented position.

IV. How did iii occur without a major women’s movement?

a. What ultimately provided women with increased options was their position outside mainstream society.
b. Women have not occupied positions of significance in policy making and business.
c. Women’s existence and their voice has pretty much been ignored in formal domains of life.
d. But this state of “inequality” has exempted women from having to fit into the frameworks set down by the public and private organizations that dominate the society, providing them with the freedom to explore their individuality in ways not permitted to men.

V. Mrs. Deguchi (In her 50s.)
a. Wife of a career businessman.
b. Owner of a juku.
c. Free to do what ever she wants.

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WEEKS 7&8.

Japanese Culture and Tradition

Time-tested truths about Japanese culture from the anthropology and sociology of Japan.

1. One cannot fully understand contemporary Japan (modern Japan) without understanding traditional or classic Japanese cultural patterns.

* This is because Modern Japan is built on the foundation of certain aspects of Japanese culture that have remained relatively unchanged over time.
For example: Attention to detail, tsukiai, junansei, gambaru, gaman, cultural adaptation, borrowing, synchronicity, outside reflects inside, Isshin denshin, uchi-soto, enryo, shinyo, conformity, honne and tatemae, indebtedness.

* As long as “things” are going well in Japanese society, it will appear very modern, and even Western. But as soon as problems occur within Japanese society, individually, domestically and even internationally, Japanese default to “traditional” values that are reflected in a variety of cultural behaviors that preserve these ways of thinking over time.

2. One way (not the only way) to examine these typically Japanese ways of thinking, acting, and patterning within language and culture is through an examination of the traditional arts.
Sumo: The sport, rules, ethics, dos and don’t, how the sport has been maintained over the centuries.
Tea Ceremony: The practice, the rules, the dos and don’ts, how the tradition has been maintained

3. Not all BOPJCs are equal. But, if you can identify them and understand them in premodern Japanese contexts, you have a better chance of understanding what is consistent and what is not consistent about them over time.

Seasonal Festivities in Japan

Spring
Hinamatsuri: Doll Festival
Hanami: Flower Viewing
Kodomonohi: Children’s Day

Summer
Tanabata: Star Festival
Hanabitaikai: Fireworks Displays
Obon: The Festival of the Dead

Autumn
Ohigan: Ancestral Graves Visits
Undokai: Sports days at schools at all levels
Koyô: Various events centered around watching the leaves change colors.

Winter
Omisoka: On the evening of December 31st - visit to the Buddhist temple to
ring in new year.
Oshogatsu: New Year’s Day
Setsubun: Cultural holiday that marks the end of winter celebrated on or around February 3rd.

How Sumo Reflects Japanese Society
(An Analysis Using BOPJCs)

* Ningen Kankei: Behavior and attitude that respectfully reflects one’s position and role in the Sumo world.
* Form over Function: The culturally prescribed form, shape, or pattern (way) of doing things.
* Wa: Attention to maintaining harmony, whatever the outcome of the bout.
* Humility, Conformity, Reciprocity: All actions prior to, during, and after the match ideally reflect these qualities.
* Attention to detail:
* Uchi/ Soto: Literally and figuratively.
* Isshin Denshin: The match begins only by non-verbal mutual agreement.
* <Many others are represented>
Gluck: Japan is at an unprecedented moment in history in which it must rely on soto to maintain the uchi.

Key Points:
- The idea that Outward Expression Results in Inward Balance -
- The Purpose of Sumo is to find Freedom within Proper Form -

Thursday’s Tea Practitioner: Ms. Kurara Nakano

BOPJCs to watch for in Sadô:

* Ningen Kankei (interpersonal relations)
* Form over Function
* Wa
* Humility, Conformity, Reciprocity
* Attention to Detail
* Uchi/ Soto
* Isshin Denshin
* <Many others are represented>

Key Points:
- The idea that Outward Expression Results in Inward Balance -
- The Purpose of Sadô is to find Freedom within Proper Form -

Week 7 BOPJCS

Precedent is the Key to maintaining Tradition: The longer a tradition has been in practice, the more likely it is to survive modernity. On the other hand, if a tradition is to be created, internal (uchi) or external (soto) precedent is necessary for it to be adopted.

They know more about us than we know about them: Cultural adaptation, borrowing, synchronicity, is not possible unless information about soto (the outside) is abundantly available.

Some Final Thoughts On Kriska
• The AOL is a revealing example of how an American can learn how to survive and even thrive in a Japanese work environment.
• Kriska’s experience demonstrates how cultural knowledge is just as important or even more important than language ability.
• The eventual outcome of Kriska’s work with the Honda uniform policy for women shows that change is possible in Japan, but often requires external stimuli.
• Kriska’s example demonstrates for OU students what is possible for graduates of Ohio colleges and universities interested in working with Japan related companies.

 

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WEEKS 9-10. NOTES - Now Updated For 2010 up to the dotted line.

A Continuing Theme in Weeks 9-10: One cannot fully understand contemporary Japan (modern Japan) without understanding traditional or classic Japanese cultural patterns.

Weeks 9 & 10. BOPJCs

Endless Choice: The tendency of Japanese society to strive to know about everything everywhere and having access to it. Much of what doesn’t naturally or historically exist in Japan is recreated somewhere within it.

Hansei: Reflection as a post activity following learning-related or professional events. For example, hansei-kai (reflection meetings).

Wabi & Sabi: represents a comprehensive Japanese worldview or aesthetic. It is difficult to explain wabi-sabi in Western terms, but the aesthetic is sometimes described as one of beauty that is "imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete."

Hang-up with what others (other countries) think about Japan: Society is primary (Gluck No. 7), but Japanese society now includes the global community.

Final Thoughts From JPC 250 Readings

Feiler
• In Japanese society, Form is Foundational.
• Form has rules that are often quite different from Western assumptions of what are universal values as demonstrated in the envelope example, Hara’s wedding, and Valentine’s Day.
• Japanese culture operates from the outside, in.

A Review Of the Basics Regarding Japanese Religion:

Shintoism: The indigenous religion that stresses a belief in kami. Kami are spiritual beings that inhabit all material objects as well as represent deceased human beings. A need to respect all kami result in an emphasis on proper behavior, courtesy, and good manners within Japanese culture. Shintoism tends to answer questions associated with LIFE.

Buddhism: Originally from India via China, this religion imposes form on the Shinto tendency for proper comportment in life. Buddhism tends to teach that change in life occur from the outside in. Buddhism, however, tends to provide the theological details of Japanese beliefs regarding LIFE, DEATH and the AFTER WORLD.

In everyday Japanese life, Shintoism and Buddhism compliment eachother culturally. Until the Meiji period (from 1868 on), Shintoism and Buddhism were regarded as part of the same worldview. It wasn't until the Meiji period that Japanese culture began separating the two due to external pressure from the West to explain itself, although there have always been people particularly devoted to one tradition over the other. In general though, Japanese don't make a distinction between Shintoism, Buddhism, and Japnese culture. To most Japanese, Shintoism and Buddhism IS JAPANESE CULTURE.

Zen Buddhism
- The purpose of Zen is to acquire a new viewpoint for looking into the essence of things.
- This is accomplished by achieving the state of satori, or enlightenment: a state of inward awakening which is said to be attained in a flash by direct intuition, not by intellect or words.
- Zen was first embraced by warriors who sought the composure of the mind in preparation for death , as well as to train themselves in military skills requiring self discipline and concentration.
- Satori is a state of achieving nothingness in the mind which alleviates all suffering and connects one to the universe.

Zen Meditation (Zazen)
- The purpose of Zen is to acquire a new viewpoint for looking into the essence of things; to feel the ultimate strength of the creative universal force.
- This is accomplished by achieving the state of satori, or enlightenment: a state of inward awakening which is said to be attained in a flash by direct intuition, not by intellect or words.
- Satori is a state of achieving nothingness in the mind which alleviates all suffering and connects one to the universe.
- Zen mediation is practiced today by devout members of its many sect as a religious practice as well as by those who value the religious as well as the non-religious virtues of its practice.
Secular Virtues of Zen are virtues such as:
* rediscovery of an inner self
* heightened awareness of your surroundings
* better ability to concentrate and sense the feelings of others
* relaxation of the mind, one’s emotions and intuitions

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