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About Japan

About Japan . By Rodney A. Culture. Japan has different performing arts like Kabuki, Noh, Kyogen, and Bunraku. Kabuki is a classic theater that was involved in the early seventeenth century. Kyogen is a classic comic theater that is high styled actions and lines.

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About Japan

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  1. About Japan By Rodney A.

  2. Culture • Japan has different performing arts like Kabuki, Noh, Kyogen, and Bunraku. • Kabuki is a classic theater that was involved in the early seventeenth century. • Kyogen is a classic comic theater that is high styled actions and lines. • Bunraku was popular at the end of the seventeenth century.

  3. Government • You have to be 20 years or older to vote in Japan. • Unlike American or French culture they do not elect presidents directly. Diet members elect a prime minister from among themselves. • Japan has a parliamentary system of government like Britain and Canada. • The Diet comprises the 480 House of Representatives and the 242 House of Councillors.

  4. Government continued • There are three branches, the first one is Legislative Branch (Diet), the second one is the Judicial Branch (Courts), then the third one is the Executive Branch (Cabinet).

  5. Languages • Three types of character are used to write Japanese. • There are about 2,000 kanji in regular use. Children learn 1,006 kanji in elementary school and another 939 in middle school.

  6. Foods • The Japanese eat Miso soup, Short grain rice, Meat, Seaweed, and vegetables for almost every meal. • Sushi, Tempura, Sukiyaki, and other Japanese foods are famous abroad are also popular in Japan.

  7. Nature and Climate • Japan is surrounded by sea. Warm and cold currents flow through the seas around it. • The land area of Japan is 378,000 square kilometers.

  8. Sports • Traditional martial arts, such as Judo, Kendo, Karate-do, and Aikido, thrive in modern Japan thanks to the devotion of those who practice them. • Many Japanese go to the sea for surfing and scuba diving in the summer.

  9. Flag • Japan's national flag is called the Hinomaru. • It came to be used as the national flag in the late nineteenth century. • The flag depicts the sun as a red disc against a white background.

  10. Houses • Shoes are taken off when entering a house to keep the floor clean in Japan. • Traditional Japanese homes are made of wood and supported by wooden pillars, but today's homes usually have Western style rooms with wooden flooring.

  11. Clothes • The traditional dress of Japan is the Kimono. • Kimonos are now usually worn only on special occasions, such as the Shichi-Go-San festival, weddings, and graduation ceremonies.

  12. School • Japanese children enter the first grade of elementary school in the April after their sixth birthday. Then they leave the school in the 17th grade. • Students learn traditional Japanese arts like Haiku. • The kids have to clean the school, so if they make a mess they have to clean it.

  13. School continued • They get to take turns cooking for their classmates, and they look forward to lunchtime. • The subjects they study include Japanese mathematics, Science, Social Studies, Music, Crafts, Physical Education ( or P.E.), and Home Economics.

  14. Bibliography • http://web-jpn.org/kidsweb/index.html

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