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JAPAN

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Four large islands and thousands of smaller ones make up Japan. ... Mountains and hills cover most of Japan, making it a country of great beauty. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: JAPAN


1
JAPAN
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  • Japan is an island country in the North Pacific
    Ocean. It lies off the east coast of mainland
    Asia across from Russia, Korea, and China. Four
    large islands and thousands of smaller ones make
    up Japan.

3
  • Four large islands and thousands of smaller ones
    make up Japan. The four major islandsHokkaido,
    Honshu, Kyushu, and Shikokuform a curve that
    extends for about 1,200 miles (1,900 kilometers).
    About 127 million people are crowded on these
    islands, making Japan one of the most densely
    populated countries in the world.

4
  • Mountains and hills cover most of Japan, making
    it a country of great beauty. But the mountains
    and hills take up so much area that the great
    majority of the people live on a small portion of
    the landnarrow plains along the coasts.

5
  • These coastal plains have much of Japan's best
    farmland and most of the country's major cities.
    Most of the people live in urban areas. Japan's
    big cities are busy, modern centers of culture,
    commerce, and industry. Tokyo is the capital and
    largest city.

6
  • Japan is one of the world's economic giants. Its
    total economic output is exceeded only by that of
    the United States. The Japanese manufacture a
    wide variety of products, including automobiles,
    computers, steel, television sets, textiles, and
    tires.

7
  • The country's factories have some of the most
    advanced equipment in the world. Japan has become
    a major economic power even though it has few
    natural resources. Japan imports many of the raw
    materials needed for industry and exports
    finished manufactured goods.

8
  • Life in Japan reflects the culture of both the
    East and the West. For example, the favorite
    sporting events in the country are baseball games
    and exhibitions of sumo, an ancient Japanese
    style of wrestling.

9
  • Although most Japanese wear Western-style
    clothing, many women dress in the traditional
    kimono for festivals and other special occasions.
    The Japanese no and kabuki dramas, both hundreds
    of years old, remain popular. But the Japanese
    people also flock to see motion pictures and rock
    music groups. Many Japanese artworks combine
    traditional and Western styles and themes.

10
  • Baseball in Japan is the country's favorite
    sport. The champions of the two professional
    leagues play for the national title. The winning
    team, shown here, traditionally tosses its
    manager into the air.

11
  • Early Japan was greatly influenced by the
    neighboring Chinese civilization. From the late
    400's to the early 800's, the Japanese borrowed
    heavily from Chinese art, government, language,
    religion, and technology. During the mid-1500's,
    the first Europeans arrived in Japan.

12
  • Trade began with several European countries, and
    Christian missionaries from Europe converted some
    Japanese. During the early 1600's, however, the
    rulers of Japan decided to cut the country's ties
    with the rest of the world. They wanted to keep
    Japan free from outside influences.

13
  • During the 1870's, the Japanese government began
    a major drive to modernize the country. New ideas
    and manufacturing methods were imported from
    Western countries. By the early 1900's, Japan had
    become an industrial and military power.

14
  • During the 1930's, Japan's military leaders
    gained control of the government. They set Japan
    on a program of conquest. On Dec. 7, 1941, Japan
    attacked United States military bases at Pearl
    Harbor in Hawaii, bringing the United States into
    World War II. The Japanese won many early
    victories, but then the tide turned in favor of
    the United States and the other Allied nations

15
  • In August 1945, U.S. planes dropped the first
    atomic bombs used in warfare on the Japanese
    cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. On Sept. 2,
    1945, Japan officially surrendered, and World War
    II ended.

16
  • World War II left Japan completely defeated. Many
    Japanese cities lay in ruins, industries were
    shattered, and Allied forces occupied the
    country. But the Japanese people worked hard to
    overcome the effects of the war.

17
  • An atomic blast demolished the center of
    Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 6, 1945. Japan agreed
    to surrender after a second atomic bomb was
    dropped on Nagasaki on August 9.

18
  • By the 1970's, Japan had become a great
    industrial nation. The success of the Japanese
    economy attracted attention throughout the world.
    Today, few nations enjoy a standard of living as
    high as Japan's.

19
  • Japan is a constitutional monarchy with a
    parliamentary government. The Constitution, which
    took effect in 1947, guarantees many rights to
    the people, including freedom of religion,
    speech, and the press. It awards the vote to all
    men and women age 20 and older. The Constitution
    establishes three branches of governmentthe
    executive, the legislative, and the judicial.

20
  • Japan is one of the world's most populous
    nations. About 90 percent of the people live on
    the coastal plains, which make up only about 20
    percent of Japan's territory. These plains rank
    among the most thickly populated places in the
    world.

21
  • Millions of people crowd the big cities along the
    coasts, including Tokyo, Japan's capital and
    largest city. The Tokyo metropolitan region,
    which includes the cities of Yokohama and
    Kawasaki, is the most populous urban area in the
    world.

22
  • Japanese is the official language of Japan.
    Spoken Japanese has many local dialects. These
    local dialects differ greatly in pronunciation.
    However, the Tokyo dialect is the standard form
    of spoken Japanese. Almost all the people
    understand the Tokyo dialect, which is used in
    schools and on radio and television.

23
  • Written Japanese is considered one of the most
    difficult writing systems in the world. It uses
    Japanese phonetic symbols that represent sounds
    as well as Chinese characters. Each character is
    a symbol that stands for a complete word or
    syllable. Schools in Japan also teach students to
    write the Japanese language with the letters of
    the Roman alphabet.

24
  • City life. About three-fourths of the Japanese
    people live in urban areas. Most of the urban
    population is concentrated in three major
    metropolitan areas (1) the Tokyo metropolitan
    region, which also includes the cities of
    Kawasaki and Yokohama (2) Osaka and (3) Nagoya.

25
  • Osaka is one of the three major metropolitan
    areas in Japan. Most Japanese people live in
    urban areas, and Japan's largest cities are among
    the most crowded in the world.

26
  • Most Japanese people who live in cities and
    suburbs enjoy a high standard of living. Many
    work in banks, hotels, offices, and stores.
    Others hold professional or government jobs.

27
  • In traditional homes, the rooms are separated by
    sliding paper screens, which can be rearranged as
    needed. Straw mats called tatami cover the
    floors. People sit on cushions and sleep on a
    type of padded quilt called a futon. Today, many
    Japanese apartments and houses have one or more
    rooms fitted with carpets instead of tatami and
    containing Western-style chairs and tables

28
  • Traditional Japanese houses blend with the
    natural beauty surrounding them. Such houses in
    Japan feature lovely gardens and peaceful pools.

29
  • Food and drink. Many Japanese families eat at
    restaurants on weeknights and weekends as well as
    on special occasions. Favorite dining spots
    include Japan's new casual family restaurants.
    Roads and superhighways are lined with such
    American establishments as Denny's and McDonald's
    and similar Japanese-owned chains called Skylark
    and Lotteria.

30
  • When dining at home, most older people eat
    traditional Japanese foods. They drink tea and
    eat rice at almost every meal. They supplement
    the rice with fish, tofu (soybean curd cake),
    pickled vegetables, soups made with miso (soybean
    paste), and on occasion, eggs or meat.

31
  • Overall, younger people now take in significantly
    more protein and fat then their grandparents did.
    The nutritional change has helped make the
    members of the younger generation an average of 3
    to 4 inches (8 to 10 centimeters) taller than
    their grandparents.

32
  • Religion. Many Japanese people say they are not
    devout worshipers and do not have strong
    religious beliefs. However, nearly everyone in
    Japanese society engages in some religious
    practices or rituals. Those practices are based
    on the two major religious traditions in Japan,
    Shinto and Buddhism.

33
  • Shinto means the way of the gods. It is the
    native religion of Japan and dates from
    prehistoric times. Shintoists worship many gods,
    called kami, that are found in mountains, rivers,
    rocks, trees, and other parts of nature. Shinto
    also involves ancestor worship.

34
  • Shinto and Buddhism are the two major religious
    traditions in Japan. The ceremony shown here is
    part of a Shinto observance.

35
  • A Shinto game called kemari developed from a
    sport played at Japan's royal court into a
    religious ritual to secure peace, happiness, and
    a good harvest for Japan.

36
  • Gender roles. Japanese society imposes strong
    expectations on women and men. The society
    expects women to marry in their mid-20's, become
    mothers soon afterward, and stay at home to
    attend to the needs of their husband and
    children.

37
  • Women often have a dominant role in raising
    children and handling the family finances. Men
    are expected to support their families as sole
    breadwinners. To make this possible, Japanese
    employers provide male workers with family
    allowances.

38
  • Most Japanese men accept this idea of their place
    in society, and many women do, too. But in
    practice, the majority of Japanese women do hold
    jobs at one time or another. Most women work
    before they marry, and many of them return to the
    labor force after their children are in school or
    grown. In addition, some Japanese women work
    while their children are young.

39
  • Altogether, about 50 percent of all Japanese
    women over age 15 are in the labor force at any
    one time. But because of the society's
    expectations about gender roles, female employees
    earn lower incomes and receive fewer benefits
    than male employees do, and have almost no job
    security.

40
  • Japanese society places an extremely high value
    on educational achievement, particularly for
    males. The Japanese measure educational
    achievement chiefly by the reputation of the
    university a student attends. The student's
    grades or field of study are less important as
    signs of success. Under most circumstances, any
    student who graduates from a top-ranked
    university has a big advantage over other college
    graduates in seeking employment.

41
  • Families work hard to get their children into a
    good university, starting as soon as the
    youngsters begin school.
  • After six years at an elementary school, almost
    all Japanese children continue for another three
    years at a junior high school. Education at
    public schools is free during these nine years
    for children 6 to 14 years of age.

42
  • Public school students attend classes Monday
    through Friday and half a day on Saturday, except
    for two weeks each month when they have Saturdays
    off. The Japanese school year runs from April
    through March of the next year. Vacation is from
    late July through August.

43
  • During the last two years of junior high school,
    many students focus on attaining admission to a
    high school with a good record of getting its
    graduates into top universities. Many of the most
    successful high schools are expensive private
    institutions that require incoming students to
    pass a difficult entrance examination. To prepare
    for the test, many eighth- and ninth-grade
    students spend several hours each day after
    school taking exam-preparation classes at private
    academies called juku.

44
  • Students attend senior high school for three
    years. Classes include many of the same subjects
    studied in junior high school, along with courses
    to prepare students for college or train them for
    jobs. While in high school, a student may
    continue to study at a juku as preparation for
    the entrance exam to a university.

45
  • Japanese students consistently score well on
    international tests of science and mathematics
    skills. But many Japanese are concerned about the
    disadvantages of their educational system.
    Parents feel that it places too much emphasis on
    memorization and taking exams.

46
  • Most would prefer to have their children educated
    in a more creative environment that requires less
    time in classrooms. Many Japanese politicians and
    business people agree that their educational
    system has flaws.

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