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The eight core values of the Japanese businessman: Toward an understanding of Japanese management (Routledge, 2016). Kumagai, Fumie, and Donna J. Keyser. Unmasking Japan today: The impact of traditional values on modern Japanese society (Greenwood, 1996) online. Makoto, A. T. O. H. "Very low fertility in Japan and value change hypotheses."
Confucian values and popular Zen: Sekimon Shingaku in eighteenth century Japan (University of Hawaii Press, 1993) online; Zhang, Yan Bing, et al. "Harmony, hierarchy and conservatism: A cross-cultural comparison of Confucian values in China, Korea, Japan, and Taiwan." Communication research reports 22.2 (2005): 107-115. online
This is a list of current and former television programs broadcast by TV Japan in North America. The network broadcasts a variety of Japanese programs, ranging from anime to drama . Current programming
Bowing Bowing in the tatami room. Bowing (お辞儀, o-jigi) is probably the feature of Japanese etiquette that is best known outside Japan. Bowing is extremely important: although children normally begin learning how to bow at a very young age, companies commonly train their employees precisely how they are to bow.
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Originally Yamato-damashii did not bear the bellicose weight or ideological timbre that it later assumed in pre-war modern Japan. It first occurs in the Otome (乙女) section of The Tale of Genji (Chapter 21), as a native virtue that flourishes best, not as a contrast to foreign civilization but, rather precisely, when it is grounded on a solid basis in Chinese learning.
The Watsits Show, Dame Oyaji and Sazae-san: October 4 1973 (For the Watsits Show) April 2, 1974 (For Sazae-san and No Good father) October 9, 1974 Knack Animation: Don Chuck Monogatari: April 5, 1975 September 27, 1975 Youkaiden Nekome Kozou: April 1, 1976 September 30, 1976 Don Chuck Monogatari: April 7, 1976 March 25, 1978 Groizer X: July 1, 1976
Wa is considered integral to Japanese society and derives from traditional Japanese family values. [4] Individuals who break the ideal of wa to further their own purposes are brought in line either overtly or covertly, by reprimands from a superior or by their family or colleagues' tacit disapproval.