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Japan: A Culture in Transition


Article # : 11412 

Section : MODERN THOUGHT
Issue Date : 11 / 1986  6,484 Words
Author : Rene Peritz
Rene Peritz is a professor of political science at Slippery Rock University in Pennsylvania, specializing in comparative politics. He has spent the last several years writing on East Asian affairs.

       Harumi, twenty-six, disembarked from a Northwest Orient flight from Tokyo to Minneapolis. A violist, she had enrolled at the University of Minnesota to study music education. It was her first trip abroad.
       
        Masao, thirty-two, a marine biologist, was waiting for her in the arrival lounge. It was to be the first meeting between the two. They had only indirectly heard of each other and neither one knew what to expect on this first encounter. Each wore an identifying scarf.
       
        She approached him: "I am Harumi. Somehow our mothers arranged our marriage. Konnichiwa [good afternoon]." He: "Konnichiwa. Are you tired? Did you have a good flight?"
       
        The formal marriage lasted not quite a year. The Japanese court granted a divorce in 1985 on grounds of incompatibility.
       
        The ways Harumi and Masao came together and separated are instructive, for much of contemporary Japan is reflected in this unhappy relationship. Furthermore, even though World War II ended nearly half a century ago, certain legacies continue. Nations that lose major wars tend to lose their moral moorings, their sense of purpose in the global community, and confidence in the stability of their social and political institutions. Political values, national symbols, and social norms are affected, questioned, and reinterpreted to fit the new realities. Yet for the Japanese, the past has not been shunted aside and traditional patterns of authority and power have continued. Indeed, there have been reinterpretations of accepted mores but national objectives have survived physically as a state and ... (1992 of 41367 Characters)
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