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NCTA Seminar on Japan Winter 06

NCTA Seminar on Japan Winter 06. Mineharu (J.J.) Nakayama The Ohio State University January 10 & 17, 2006 Nakayama.1@osu.edu http://japan.osu.edu. East Asia. Basic facts about Japan. Japan – Nippon/Nihon Flag - Nisshooki Emblem - Chrysanthemum Anthem – Kimigayo

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NCTA Seminar on Japan Winter 06

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  1. NCTA Seminar on JapanWinter 06 Mineharu (J.J.) Nakayama The Ohio State University January 10 & 17, 2006 Nakayama.1@osu.edu http://japan.osu.edu

  2. East Asia

  3. Basic facts about Japan • Japan – Nippon/Nihon • Flag - Nisshooki • Emblem - Chrysanthemum • Anthem – Kimigayo • Population - about a half of the US population • Average life expectancy – M 77.8 F 84.6 in ’05est (US M 74.9 F 80.7 in ’05est) • Minorities: Ainu, Chinese-Japanese, Korean-Japanese, (village people) • http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ja.html

  4. Land • covers from Maine to Florida • No part of Japan is farther than 70 miles from the sea • Tokyo (latitude) – Grand Canyon • 4 major islands – Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku, & Kyushu • 47 states/political regions • Size – about the size of California • 67% - Forests • 14% -Agriculture

  5. Japanese language: writing systems • Kanji characters:日 本 • Hiragana:に ほん • Katakana:ニ ホン • Romaji: Ni hon • English: Nihon/Japan

  6. A quick history • Jomon Culture (10th- 3rd C BC) • Rope figured pots, Dogu (doll) • First Emperor – Jimmu (660 BC) (http://w2.avis.ne.jp/~jomon/culture/index.html) • Yayoi Culture 3rd C BC – 3rd C AD • Smooth pottery • Rice cultivation (irrigation) • Queen Himiko (Land of Wa) • Kofun Period 3-6th C • Tombs • Haniwa • Shinto/Kami • Buddhism (538 AD)

  7. Tateana

  8. Izumo

  9. History: Asuka Period (mid 6th -mid 7th c) Prince Shotoku • Buddhism becomes the state religion • First Constitution (17 articles), Chinese calendar • Horyu-ji (Temple) Hosso Sect

  10. History: Nara Period (710-784) • Nara Period (710-784) • Heijo-kyo – imitating Changan, China • Kojiki (Records of Ancient Matters) First history book • Nihon-Shoki (Chronicles of Japan) First written mythology • Manyooshu (Collection of Myriad Leaves) • Shosoin (Imperial museum) • Todaiji (Temple) Kegon sect – Daibutsu (Great Buddha)

  11. History: Heian Period (794-1191) • Heian-kyo in Kyoto (Changan-like) • Aristocratic life style (Fujiwara Family) • Tendai sect (Saicho); Shingon Sect (Kukai) • Kana was developed • Kokinshu (Collection of Ancient and Modern Verse) imperial anthology • Tale of Genji by Lady Murasaki – World’s first novel • Pillow Book LP • Japaneseness

  12. Heian Lady

  13. Heian Man

  14. History: Feudalism Late Heian Period Heike (Taira family) vs. Genji (Minamoto family) struggle • Kamakura Period (1192-1336) • 1st Shogun – Minamoto-no Yoritomo • Different Buddhist sects -> Pure Land sect, True Pure Land sect, Soto Zen sect LP, Nichiren sect • Kubilai Khan’s attack -> Kamikaze • Nanboku-cho/Ashikaga Period (1336-1573) Golden Pavilion, Silver Pavilion Noh – Zeami 1467-1477 war in Kyoto 1467-1568 civil war 1543 – Portuguese commerce arrived and left a gun 1549-57 Francis Xavier

  15. Kinkakuji Ginkakuji

  16. Ryuanji Zen Rock Garden

  17. History: Azuchi-Momoyama Period (1568-1603) • 1568 Oda seized Kyoto • 1582 Oda assassinated • Toyotomi kept the campaign and completed in 1590 (national unification) • 1592-7 Toyotomi sent troops to Korea • Toyotomi was never a Shogun

  18. History: EdoPeriod (1603-1867) • Edo Tokugawa Shogunate • Feudal Lords; 4 classes (outcasts) LP; National Isolation Policy; Neo-Confucianism Ninjo vs. Giri – Bunraku (puppet shows) Haiku, Kabuki, Ukiyoe • 1853 Commodore Perry (Nakahama ManjiroLP) • 1867 Last Shogun Tokugawa Keiki resigns

  19. History: Meiji-Taisho • Meiji Restoration in 1868 LP • 1869 Emperor moved to Tokyo • 1872 Compulsory Education; Railroad • 1889 Imperial Constitution (cf. Weimar)LP • 1890 Diet (Peers and Representatives) • 1881-98 6177 British, 2764 Americans, 913 Germans, 619 French, and 45 Italians • 1894-5 Sino-Japanese War (control of Korea) • 1904-5Russo-Japanese War • 1907 Universal Education

  20. History: Taisho-Showa PreWWII • 1910-45 Occupation of Korea • 1914-8 Entry into WWI • 1925 Universal male suffrage • 1931 Depression; occupied Manchuria • 1933 withdrawing from the League of Nations • 1937 War against China (Rape of Nanking) • 1940 Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere • Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis • 1941 Pact with Russia • 1941 WWII • (3 choices - backing down in China, seize Indonesian oil, compromise with the US) LP • 1945 Atomic bombs (8/6 Hiroshima; 8/9 Nagasaki) LP 8/8 Russia joined the war against Japan 8/15 JT Unconditional surrender (Potsdam Proclamation)

  21. History: Post-WWII • 1945-52 Allied Occupation of Japan • 1946 New Constitution (effective 3/3/47) • 1950 Korean War • 1951 San Francisco Peace Treaty; US-Japan Security Pact • 1956 Peace treaty with the Soviet Unions; Joined The United Nations • 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games (1972 Sapporo Winter Olympic Games; 1998 Nagano Winter Olympic Games) • 1965 Treaty with South Korea; Vietnam War • 1969 Reversion of Okinawa (effective in 1972) • 1973 Oil Crisis • 80’s (Japan as No.1), Economic bubble • 1989 Emperor Hirohito dies (End of Showa) • 1993 Coalition Government • 1996 Great Hanshin Earthquake • 2002 Prime Minister Koizumi visited North Korea

  22. Kidnapping by North Korea • Japan’s occupation of Korea 1910-45 • Korean War ended in 1953 • Kidnapping during 60s-70s • North Koreans living in Japan • Prime Minister Koizumi visited North Korea (Democratic People's Republic of Korea) on September 17, 2002 and May 22, 2004) to meet North Korean Leader Kim Jong-Il) • Kidnapping of at least 13 Japanese Yasushi & Fukie Chimura, Kaoru & Yukiko Hasuike, Hitomi Soga & Charles Jenkins

  23. Soga and Jenkins Hitomi SOGA Returned in 2002 Kidnapped in August 1978 and married Sgt. Charles Robert Jenkins while in North Korea. She returned to Japan one month after the summit. Charles Robert Jenkins Charged with desertion Disappeared across the DMZ in January 1965 Married Japanese kidnap victim Hitomi Soga, they have 2 daughters He is planning to live the rest of his life in Japan

  24. South Korea: Takeshima / Dokdo dispute http://www.geocities.com/mlovmo/page4.html http://www.pref.shimane.jp/section/takesima/eng/top.html

  25. People’s Republic of ChinaSenkaku / Diaoyu islands dispute

  26. Political relations with Korea & China • Political relations with K & C have been strained due toPM Koizumi’s visits to the Yasukuni Shrine (honoring Japanese war dead). • 14 class A war criminals are among the 2.5 million people enshrined at Yasukuni. • The Japanese Constitution provides separation of church and state, much like the U.S. Constitution.

  27. Japan’s trade with China • Japan's top trading partner for the first time in 2004 Japan's trade with China and Hong Kong, including exports and imports, rose to a record ¥22.2 trillion ($213.2 billion), 20.1 % of Japan's total foreign trade, in 2004 • Trade with the US - the ¥20.5 trillion ($194.5 billion) in 2004 • More than 13 % of all Japanese exports are for China. • Japanese imports from China - 20.7 % of the country's market.

  28. Some concepts to understand the Society Honne (real feeling) &Tatemae (what is supposed to be) ­ consideration to those who you care Ie (House/family, duty to Ie), On (benevolence), filial piety , Giri vs. Ninjo, Uchi vs. Soto Kao (face) ­ losing one’s face; role, company ­ position ­ creates face Use of the go-between ­ first introduction; conflict resolution Decision making ­ Ringi (nemawashi ­ root binding)……takes time Entering a long relationship – the relationship is valued

  29. Current Education System • Compulsory education • Elementary (6 years); Junior high school (3 yrs) Textbooks (free), curriculum (decided by the Ministry of Education, local board of education/school), Lesson studies Non-Compulsory education • Kindergarten (cf. Daycare) LP • High schools/vocational schools/colleges – 3, 5 years • Comm. Colleges (2 yrs), Colleges (4 or 6 yrs)

  30. Addition: Communication with the Japanese People • Speak slowly and clearly ­ no need to speak loudly • Don’t use the first or nick names in rather formal occasions and even informal occasions(the use of the first name may be all right to the person who was addressed to, but often not acceptable to others who are in the same conversational domain – esp. business contexts) • Japanese “Yes” does not mean the same YES in English - They are translating Japanese “hai”, which is just promoting the conversational discourse (i.e., Yes, I am listening,etc.) • Don’t maintain steady eye contact while talking

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