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He then takes the kid to school which causes further scandal and a suspension. Publicar un comentario. Asia no sekai world. Joon-soo is a tough 18 year old high school kid that loves to cause trouble. But during this time an unexpected event occurs between Joon-soo and Woo-ram…. Otros personajes. Suscribirse a: Enviar comentarios Atom. Redes Sociales. Popular Tags Blog Archives. All My Love. Alone in Love. Always Spring. Amore Mio.

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Best Couple. Big Heat. Big Man. Big Sister. Billie Jean, Look at Me. Boarding House No. Bolder By the Day. Boys Before Flowers. Bridal Mask. Bride of the Century. Bride of the Sun. By My Side. Byul Soon Geom. Byul Soon Geom 2. Byul Soon Geom 3. CCain and Abel. Can You Hear My Heart. Capital Scandal. Case Number 1. Cat Chef. Catch A Kang Nam Mother. Cheer Up, Mr. Cheers to Me. Cheese in the Trap. Cheongdamdong Scandal. Chicago Typewriter. Chief Kim. Childless Comfort. Choco Bank.

Chuno The Slave Hunters. Cinderella and Four Knights. Cinderella Man. City of the Sun. Click Your Heart. Clocking Out. A series of short snippets and mundane anecdotes about Japan. Informative if you know little about Japan, yet often repetitive. A non essential component to visiting the country. Oct 01, Marrynka rated it it was amazing. Perfect book to read before traveling to Japan.

After reading it I feel fully prepared for my trip. Book includes a lot of general information written in engaging and concise way which makes it a page-turner. Book includes chapters about history, traditional arts, Japanese culture and mindset, food, music, anime and manga and way more - basically everything there is to know about this fascinating country : Last two chapters are aimed specifically at tourist planning their trip, they are packed Perfect book to read before traveling to Japan.

Book includes chapters about history, traditional arts, Japanese culture and mindset, food, music, anime and manga and way more - basically everything there is to know about this fascinating country : Last two chapters are aimed specifically at tourist planning their trip, they are packed with places to visit as well as practical advice. Oct 27, Gabe Baskin rated it really liked it. A good book, particularly if you, say, just so happen to be moving to Japan.

Unlike other Japanese culture books, this book provides the "why" behind the customs in addition to sharing what the norms are. Apr 18, Darjeeling rated it it was amazing. For instance, kabuki theater appeared as a consequence of the need to entertain an increasingly flourishing society with more and more free time.

In the top left corner there is a picture of the Statue Of Liberty. This confused me at fi p This confused me at first. Turns out Japan just decided they wanted one too. They also have a copy of the Eiffel Tower. Talk about cultural appropriation :P I found the chapter on Japanese business the most interesting, probably because it was the topic I knew the least about.

I also learned allot about Confucianism for similar reasons, it's one of the few eastern philosophies I haven't studied yet, and I will add a few books on the topic to my reading list. It sounds fascinating, sort of like Plato's Republic which I have managed to read allot about without having actually read.

That's on my list too except that it actually works. It's a heavily collectivist ideology, and not something I would want to live in. In fact I would probably feel the need to rebel against it, just as I feel the need to rebel against collectivism in my own culture, and we can see some of the disadvantages to collectivism, as well as the advantages, in Japanese culture, which I have always had a great deal of respect for and still do.

I'm envious of Japans low crime rate, and almost non existent terrorism Japan has a very strict immigration policy , but I also don't want to be forced into a system of mass conformity, where argument from authority is not considered a logical fallacy. Sometimes you can't have your cake and eat it. I do think there are some aspects of Japanese culture we can and should culturally appropriate, just as they have culturally appropriated many of the best aspects of western culture and integrated them.

Jan 31, Tanya Tosheva rated it really liked it Shelves: non-fiction. This will not be so much a review of the book as my attempt to remember a gazillion facts and new Japanese words, which overwhelmed me despite already knowing some from anime and manga and being used to the sound of the language. Almost everything below is a quote. History of Japan view spoiler [ Legend tells that Japan was born of the love between two deities, Izanagi and Izanami. These two deities had a daughter, Amaterasu, and the long dynasty of Japanese emperors descends from her.

T This will not be so much a review of the book as my attempt to remember a gazillion facts and new Japanese words, which overwhelmed me despite already knowing some from anime and manga and being used to the sound of the language. The first settlers whose archeological remains have been found belong to the Jomon Period, more than 8, years ago. But not until the eighth century CE is there a real Japanese state, with its first capital being Nara.

Between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries, Japan was run as a system of flefs, or local powers subordinate to the shogun, that were always flghting one another. Everything changed in the year , when one of the most important events in the history of Japan took place, the battle of Sekigahara. The first Tokugawa was Ieyasu, who decided to govern from his castle in Edo, present-day Tokyo.

The period under Tokugawa rule would become known as the Edo Period — Without hesitation, the emperor replied that they must drive the Americans away. He had to resign, allowing the triumphal restoration of power to the imperial house. They used the Chinese symbols to represent their own spoken language graphically, though the Chinese and Japanese grammars have nothing in common.

Kanji : symbols with from one to several meanings, one to several pronunciations, and can be combined to form new words. This last point, while seemingly trivial, gives the greatest headaches to those studying this language and to the Japanese themselves, who must devote more than ten years to learning how to write them. Books and newspapers using kanji that are not on this list must write their transcription in the hiragana syllabic alphabet.

Katakana : The katakana syllabary is used to write words of foreign origin that have been introduced into Japanese. Hiragana : The 46 symbols in the hiragana syllabary represent the 46 possible consonant and vowel combinations in spoken Japanese. Romaji : The transcription in Roman alphabet of how a word sounds.

A Japanese person reading romaji—and this may strike us as amazing—will find it difficult to understand what it says. Japanese minds are designed to understand symbols and not letters. It was Laozi or Lao Tzu who developed tao or dao. The Japanese seek perfection in some tasks kata as a means to acquire spiritual satisfaction in their lives.

Basically, the apprenticeship system in any discipline following the -Tao-Zen philosophy consists of three steps: 1. Establishing a series of patterns, models, or forms known as kata. Repeating the kata for many years. From the Western point of view, concealing the truth may be looked on with disfavor.

We could say tatemae serves as a lubricant in human relationships. It is also used in business, where established conventions have to be followed. The origin of giri is ancient, but it became widespread through the influence of the samurai class in the feudal era, who would feel giri toward the lord protecting their families. Giri forces us to return favors, to preserve harmony in human and social relationships so that some measure of peace is maintained in society.

This might seem a matter of common sense in any other culture, but in Japan the amount of gift giving can be extravagant. Today, omiai marriages still happen, but there is more freedom.

Nevertheless, one out of every ten marriages today is of the omiai kind. Another manifestation of amae would be when you act capriciously so that your protector will let you get away with something.

A boy pretends to be tired so that his mother will yield and allow him to go to bed without putting his clothes in the washing machine. Then, we have friends, followed by our company, and last, we have our country.

The Japanese will treat you as soto simply because they unconsciously believe you are some sort of threat to their uchi harmony, and that is one of the reasons Japan is such a closed country.

They will probably be more attentive to you than your Western friends. The problem is, you feel as though there is some sort of barrier. Keiretsu : groups of companies that work together, trying not to compete with one another and cooperating in order to make more money together.

Meishi : business cards, but in Japan they are an extremely important element when starting a conversation with a stranger, a client, or another company. Because the meishi is so significant, you must treat it with the utmost care, as if it were part of the other person.

Nemawashi : an essential concept for understanding the Japanese business world. To some extent, you could see nemawashi as a sort of democracy taken to the extreme. Thanks to this, Japanese companies seldom make mistakes and are always taking steps forward and improving ceaselessly, if slowly. Suppose you have the brilliant idea of eliminating a redundant chip from one of the company products. Before making your proposal, you must make sure that all the employees around you agree.

The Sony employee will consult all his department coworkers, and, once he has made sure his proposal is accepted by everyone, he will talk with his kakaricho immediate superior. His superior will then do a nemawashi among the other department heads, and once they have agreed, the process will continue until the idea reaches the highest spheres at Sony.

Notice how, if the nemawashi process fails somewhere along the line because someone is totally against it, the idea never flows toward the top of the pyramid. Once the nemawashi process has been completed, the department that initiated it can make a formal proposal in a meeting, where it will obviously be accepted. The Japanese avoid direct confrontation above all. Making changes in Japan is difficult.

Everything is slow, there is a lot of paperwork, everybody must agree, and there are tons of meetings. But when things are done, they usually work to perfection—everything goes well.

The same expression would be used the other way around, if our boss gave us a present. Sometimes it happens that someone is too ambitious and flaunts his power too much, and he ends up being ostracized by his company and society.

There are books about cases where a person of great promise has ended up cleaning the company bathrooms because he was too ambitious and his superiors got scared: the Japanese see ambition as a threat to the inner balance of the system, which might bring them down in the future.

Thus, if you drink a beer, you are drinking sake; if you drink whiskey, you are drinking sake; and if you drink rum, you are drinking sake. Today the hanami tradition involves sitting under a sakura tree with your family, your friends, or the people at your company. The manji : an ancient Buddhist symbol full of spiritual meaning. Resembles a swastikas, which shocks many tourists.

Jinja : Shinto shrines The easiest way to identify a jinja is to look at the entrance. You will almost always find a large red wooden gate marking the entrance to sacred ground. In contrast, at the entrance to a Buddhist o-tera, there is usually a smaller dark-colored gate and walls separating the temple grounds from the outside.

Ukiyo-e : print-making art was developed during the Edo Period — Thanks to the ease with which ukiyo-e copies could be made, they arrived in the West and influenced painters of the time, such as Vincent Van Gogh and Claude Monet.

May constitute one of the earliest pornographic markets in history. Moreover, only the best shoots are hand-picked for the matcha production, and unlike in other teas, they are ground to an extremely flne powder.

It is very rich in amino acids and antioxidants. Zen koan : brief stories in the form of riddles or fables that Zen teachers use to teach lessons to their students. Blood groups In Japan, people ask what your blood group is in the most unexpected situations. Laughter Covering your teeth with your hand is seen as a sign of good manners in Japanese women. Shamelessly showing the inside of your mouth when you laugh can be seen as a sign of bad manners. For future someday!

Jun 23, Sam Still Reading rated it it was amazing Recommends it for: people wishing to know more about Japan. Recommended to Sam Still Reading by: saw it on the bookshop shelf. A Geek in Japan is one of those books I saw on the shelf at my local bookstore and just had to have.

I love Japan and I love to learn more about it. A Geek in Japan is deceiving though, in that it contains much more information than you think at first glance. Hector Garcia has obviously put a lot of time and effort into researching this book, which delves into many aspects of Japan.

It includes history, social structures I learned more from this book than I did from six years of Japanese , cult A Geek in Japan is one of those books I saw on the shelf at my local bookstore and just had to have.

It includes history, social structures I learned more from this book than I did from six years of Japanese , culture, work life, leisure, anime, cosplay, vending machines, zen, Shinto, Buddhism, temples, shrines and walking tours of various places in Tokyo.

What I found very interesting was that according to Hector, the Japanese wish for harmony as a whole over triumph of the individual — which is very different to what occurs in the West. It was also interesting to see repetition given as a way of learning — if you do something hundreds of times, you will end up getting it right.



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