Home
Learn Japanese with JapanesePod101.com

Japan Photos

Want to see more pictures of Japan? See the way people used to live and the way they live now. You can even buy the best of our Japan photos in high resolution. Take a look here for a sample.
TheJapanChannel Photos...

Japan Videos

Check out our great selection of unique Japan videos. See the country from a new perspective and learn about Japanese art, culture and history. See this weeks latest video. Check-it-out!
TheJapanChannel Videos...
Japan Forum
Welcome, Guest
Please Login or Register.    Lost Password?
How the Japanese perceive "identity"? (550 viewing) (550) Guests
Go to bottom Post Reply Favoured: 0
TOPIC: How the Japanese perceive "identity"?
#5726
Zeph_Zhang (User)
Fresh Boarder
Posts: 4
graphgraph
User Offline Click here to see the profile of this user
How the Japanese perceive "identity"? 11 Years, 9 Months ago Karma: 0  
I recently had a conversation on YouTube (good ones occasionally do happen) where my correspondent said this: "It's all about being independent, in the rawest sense of the word. You cannot be independent if you are defined by another person's interpretation of you. Be they man or woman. Your identity must be your own choice, not something given to you or recommended by society. Otherwise there's nothing truly distunguishing you from any other person, no way of acting in a truly free and autonomous manner."

I take this to be a very North American (or Western) attitude toward identity.

My question is, the Japanese having a strong sense of the collective, by what measure do they self-identify? I'm not sure if I'm asking the question clearly. I would assume that each person thinks of themselves as "me, the possessor of X traits and characteristics attached to my consciousness". In NA, the notion of independence is highly valued. It seems to me that independence must obligatorily imply a self-locus, "me" is differentiated from the collective.

How do they deal with this, compared to Western folk?
 
Report to moderator   Logged Logged  
  The administrator has disabled public write access.
Go to top Post Reply
Powered by FireBoardget the latest posts directly to your desktop