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Volda-Griffith Austral-Asian Study Immersion Program 2010

Volda-Griffith Austral-Asian Study Immersion Program 2010. An Introduction to Japanese Society Wayne Muller Griffith University 21 st September 2010. LECTURE STRUCTURE. (1) Main historical trends since World War Two. (2) The Japanese "economic miracle".

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Volda-Griffith Austral-Asian Study Immersion Program 2010

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  1. Volda-Griffith Austral-Asian Study Immersion Program 2010 • An Introduction to Japanese Society • Wayne Muller • Griffith University • 21st September 2010

  2. LECTURE STRUCTURE • (1) Main historical trends since World War Two. • (2) The Japanese "economic miracle". • (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. *** • (4) Some critiques of post war Japan. • (5) Some challenges for contemporary Japan.

  3. (1) Main historical trends since World War Two. • The devastation of WW2

  4. (1) Main historical trends since World War Two. • The Occupation • Demilitarization • War trials • New constitution • Economic rebuilding • The Korean War- towards the “Economic Miracle”

  5. (2) The Japanese "economic miracle". • Geographical limitations • The duration and scope of the “boom” • “Those successful Japanese” • “The Japanese economic miracle” • “The fragile superpower” • “Japan as number one” • “The too successful Japanese” • “The electronic tribe” • Explanations of the “economic miracle”

  6. (2) The Japanese "economic miracle". • Geographical limitations

  7. Shizuoka City

  8. Landuse Concentration

  9. Tokyo Motorways

  10. Shinkansen-Land Use Concentration Tokyo

  11. (2) The Japanese "economic miracle". • The duration and scope of the “boom” • “Those successful Japanese” • “The Japanese economic miracle” • “The fragile superpower” • “Japan as number one” • “The too successful Japanese” • “The electronic tribe” • Explanations of the “economic miracle”

  12. (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. • Some cultural and social paradoxes • Monocultural identity • Hierarchy • Group identity • Shame and obligation ("on") • A meritocracy • Consensus decision making • A formal people given to strict ritual and protocol

  13. (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. • Some cultural and social paradoxes • Lack of violence vs Manga, Samurai films, Yakuza • Friendliness and courtesy vs “rudeness” • Chauvinism vs power of wife in the home • “Company man” vs contractors • Hierarchy vs classlessness • Landscape beauty vs ugliness

  14. Manga Comics

  15. Manga Comics

  16. Manga Comics

  17. Authentic Samurai

  18. Samurai-Movie Depiction

  19. Yakuza

  20. Yakuza-Tattoos

  21. Suburban Ugliness Tokyo

  22. The Beauty of Japanese Gardens

  23. (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. • Monocultural identity • Limited minorities- Koreans, Ainu, Eta • “Nihonjinron” • Japanese calendar • Japanese celebrations- Adult Day, Shichi-Go-San, Respect for aged day, Emperor’s birthday • Japanese food

  24. Artificial Window Food Display

  25. (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. • Hierarchy • Contributions of Feudalism, Confucianism, Buddhism, status of Emperor, etc • Japanese as a “respect language” • Bowing and hierarchy • Core values of “displaying respect” and “knowing one’s proper place”

  26. Osaka Castle

  27. Kinkajui Buddhist Temple- Kyoto

  28. (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. • Group identity • Group identity at the national level • Group identity within the workplace- company practices which develop a sense of “the group” • Group identity at school, in the family and “the village” • Group protest • Group behaviour while on vacation • Group less individuals- “Ronin”

  29. (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. • Shame and obligation ("on") • “On” as a core value cf sin and guilt • Meaning in English- “mutual obligation”, etc • Levels of “on”- Emperor, family, teacher, etc • “On” and gift giving

  30. (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. • A meritocracy • Legacy of Confucianism • Significance of education- • Institutional hierarchies • “Examination hell” • “Juku” • Employability linked to educational outcomes

  31. (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. • Consensus decision making • Decision by consensus- “root binding” • Lower salary differentials than in West • Bosses located with the workers • Quality control circles

  32. (3) Some Japanese social characteristics. • A formal people given to strict ritual and protocol • The tea ceremony • The role of Geisha • Department store etiquette • Business protocols • Bowing • Ritual and trains • Ritual protest Yoyogi Park and Unions • Kamikaze pilots

  33. “Irrashaimase” “Welcome”Department Store Etiquette

  34. Yoyogi Park Ritual Protest

  35. Ultranationalist Protest in Japan

  36. Ultranationalist Protest in Japan

  37. Shinto Wedding Ceremony

  38. (4) Some critiques of post war Japan. • Environmental issues • Gender issues • Life chances • Racism • Trading practices

  39. (4) Some critiques of post war Japan. • Environmental issues

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