And many lands outside of England and Japan use school uniforms, too.
Lots of business suits here in Japan too. The US has gotten much more casual about suits in recent years. Japan is heading that way, too, though I suspect lots of guys will be in suits for many years to come. : )
Anyway, for casual readers of this site or the original site in question who might wonder about clothing in Japan, I just wanted to point out that jeans are very common here. Kimonos, on the other hand, are much more noteworthy and interesting, but worn quite infrequently, for those ladies who wear them at all.
(There are some interesting variances, of course: Women in traditional restaurants, or running traditional inns, etc., may wear a kimono nearly daily as a "business uniform"!)
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Home Japan Glossary
New words, and new uses of old words, appearing on this site:
Culturology
For lack of a better word, "culturology" is what I label a particular brand of fascination with, and practice of, "cross-cultural comparison". (Suggestions for a better name are welcome!)
Not cultural comparison as it can be in theory: an objective, even interesting, examination of different cultures. Rather, I use "culturology" to mean cultural comparison as it too often appears in practice: subjective and unscientific nonsense, with a good story taking precedence over facts.
Or, for a pithier definition: Culturology is the dogged effort to dig up and exhibit "cultural differences" whether they exist or not.
Culturologists
The uncritical practitioners of culturology, whether academics, writers, or just general fans of "cultural difference" tales not hampered by critical examination.
Japanology
This has a general meaning of "the study of things Japanese"; here I use it to mean culturology as applied to Japan. It's closely tied to Nihonjinron, with all negative connotations intact.
Japanologist
The uncritical believers – Japanese or otherwise – of elements of Japanology.
Japander
With a friendly nod to Japander.com, which has long applied the word to the commercial appearances of Hollywood stars in Japan, I use the verb in a way closer to the original "pander": to Japander is to tell the Japanologists the silliness they love to hear. "I think Japanese developed as the world's most complex language, thanks to Japan's unique four seasons" – that's Japandering.
Traveler's Law #1
"Any exposition pointing out 'cultural contrasts' must contain at least one bit of unsupported silliness."
Traveler's Law #2
"Any statement beginning with 'the Japanese' (or 'the French', 'Ghanaians', 'Asians', 'Westerners', whatever) is 99% certain to be a dumb statement."
words in quotes
Words like "Westerner" and "the East" may appear in quotes to emphasize their inherent silliness. A claim that "the Japanese" are baffled by some "Western mindset" regarding a "cultural difference" that doesn't even exist, is deserving of all those mocking quotes.
Fri, 2008-06-27 15:09 — Traveler
Re: Commenting on "10 Reasons America Is Better Than Japan"
And many lands outside of England and Japan use school uniforms, too.
Lots of business suits here in Japan too. The US has gotten much more casual about suits in recent years. Japan is heading that way, too, though I suspect lots of guys will be in suits for many years to come. : )
Anyway, for casual readers of this site or the original site in question who might wonder about clothing in Japan, I just wanted to point out that jeans are very common here. Kimonos, on the other hand, are much more noteworthy and interesting, but worn quite infrequently, for those ladies who wear them at all.
(There are some interesting variances, of course: Women in traditional restaurants, or running traditional inns, etc., may wear a kimono nearly daily as a "business uniform"!)