Loading...
Logo Zenevenes
Login
Logo Zenevenes
  • Home
  • Games

    • Logo Termo/Wordle Termo - Wordle 🇧🇷
    • Logo Termo/Wordle Colmeia - Spelling Bee 🇧🇷
  • Quotes
  1. Quotes
  2. Categories
  3. japanese-culture
Back

We hope that general readers with an interest in Japan will find in these accounts of fieldwork a wide spectrum of illustrations of the grassroots realities of everyday life in contemporary Japanese communities, companies, institutions, and social movements.

Theodore C. Bestor , in Doing Fieldwork in Japan
society japan ethnography fieldwork japanese-culture

Words are not meant to stir the air only: they are capable of moving greater things.

Sōseki Natsume
words japanese words-have-power japanese-literature japanese-culture

The Japanese have two words: "uchi" meaning inside and "soto" meaning outside. Uchi refers to their close friends, the people in their inner circle. Soto refers to anyone who is outside that circle. And how they relate and communicate to the two are drastically different. To the soto, they are still polite and they might be outgoing, on the surface, but they will keep them far away, until they are considered considerate and trustworthy enough to slip their way into the uchi category. Once you are uchi, the Japanese version of friendship is entire universes beyond the average American friendship! Uchi friends are for life. Uchi friends represent a sacred duty. A Japanese friend, who has become an uchi friend, is the one who will come to your aid, in your time of need, when all your western "friends" have turned their back and walked away.

Alexei Maxim Russell , in The Japanophile's Handbook
friend friendship friends culture manga japan japanese anime western-culture cultural-differences japanese-culture japanophile otaku

If the Emperor had not delivered his [15 August 1945] address urging the Japanese people to lay down their swords—if that speech had been a call instead for the Honorable Death of the Hundred Million—those people on that street in Sōshigaya probably would have done what they were told and died. And probably I would have done likewise. The Japanese see self-assertion as immoral and self-sacrifice as the sensible course to take in life. We were accustomed to this teaching and had never thought to question it.

Akira Kurosawa , in Something Like an Autobiography
self-sacrifice suicide surrender wwii 1945 self-abnegation japanese-culture 1982

This was her heritage. Her people. So why did she feel so small and weak? So far removed from it?

Linda Gerber , in Now and Zen
young-adult japanese japanese-culture

Never settle for normal, Miss Lyons,” Shinzo told her. “Normal is not natural. Extraordinary is natural, and that’s why you’re here. To do something extraordinary.

Kaylin McFarren , in Buried Threads
adventure murder suspense-thriller mystery-romance prophecy-in-fiction japanese-culture kaylin-mcfarren severed-threads

Whereas, in the west, individuality and drive are considered positive qualities, they are not seen the same way, in Japan. In that country, if you are too much of a rugged individualist, it might actually indicate that you are a weak, unreliable character and that you are selfish, in a childish, willful kind of way.

Alexei Maxim Russell , in The Japanophile's Handbook
individuality culture japan japanese childish childishness western-culture individualism cultural-differences individualist japanese-culture

I do wish men, when they're taking their leave from a lady at dawn, wouldn't insist on adjusting their clothes to a nicety, or fussily tying their lacquered cap securely into place. After all, who would laugh at a man or criticize him if they happened to catch sight of him on his way home from an assignation in fearful disarray, with his cloak or hunting costume all awry?

Sei Shōnagon , in The Pillow Book
sexuality lovers social-norms japanese-culture assignations dawn-departures heian-period palace-life

Being a samurai is all about selfless service and if the lord abuses the servant, it is no longer a situation of service; it becomes the situation of a victim. It is never acceptable for a samurai to be a victim. It is never acceptable to allow a lord to abuse you or rob you of your dignity. In such a situation, it is acceptable to walk away.

Alexei Maxim Russell , in Instruction Manual for the 21st Century Samurai
philosophy service warrior japan bushido martial-arts warriors selflessness selfless samurai selfless-love japanese-culture

Yes," I continued, "I discovered this model recently and her style never fails to be mathematically perfect. She seems to come by it naturally. As if she were born resonant. I notice Japanese models tend to do this. Like I said, they seem to have resonance somewhere deep in their culture. But Yuri Nakagawa, she's the best I've ever seen. The best model, with the most powerful resonance. I need her to probe deeper into this profound mathematical instinct, which I call resonance.

Alexei Maxim Russell , in Trueman Bradley: The Next Great Detective
fashion japan math japanese mathematics maths mathematical modeling resonance model japanese-culture fashion-blogger fashion-model harajuku japanese-model yuri-nakagawa

Bushido refers not only to martial rectitude but personal rectitude. We understand that in serving each other we serve our own interests. In serving our world, our world serves us. Allowing us to live in harmony with it.

Rick Remender , in Tokyo Ghost, Vol. 1: Atomic Garden
harmony bushido servitude tokyo-ghost rectitude japanese-culture atomic-garden kazumi

Psychologically speaking (I’ll only wheel out the amateur psychology just this once, so bear with me), encounters that call up strong physical disgust or revulsion are often in fact projections of our own faults and weaknesses.

Haruki Murakami , in Underground: The Tokyo Gas Attack and the Japanese Psyche
japan terrorism non-fiction tokyo murakami japanese-culture

What alternative is there to the media’s “Us” versus “Them”? The danger is that if it is used to prop up this “righteous” position of “ours” all we will see from now on are ever more exacting and minute analyses of the “dirty” distortions in “their” thinking. Without some flexibility in our definitions we’ll remain forever stuck with the same old knee-jerk reactions, or worse, slide into complete apathy.

Haruki Murakami , in Underground: The Tokyo Gas Attack and the Japanese Psyche
japan terrorism non-fiction tokyo murakami japanese-culture
Zenevenes white icon
Política de Privacidade | Termos de Uso
Zenevenes.com © 2026