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East Asia

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Title: East Asia


1
East Asia
2
East Asia Overview
  • Background
  • Culture and Religion
  • Tradition
  • Face
  • 4 Religions
  • Social Issues and Human Rights

3
Buddha
Background
  • To truly understand other religions/cultures, you
    must first be open to respecting other
    religions/cultures
  • Not Necessarily Acceptance
  • As a military officer you should never denigrate
    anothers beliefs

Confucius
Taoism
4
East Asia
  • Background
  • Culture and Religion
  • Tradition
  • Face
  • 4 Religions
  • Social Issues and Human Rights

5
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Nationalism
  • Long historyJapan--China
  • Regional Culture
  • New trendregional pride
  • East Asian Traditions
  • Avoid stereotyping especially since many of
    their beliefs are centuries old

6
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Long Standing Traditions/Customs
  • We have produced great art and great philosophy.
    The Mandarin speech of China is more beautiful an
    descriptive than any other in the world. Our
    poets were singing when Britain was but a rocky
    outpost on the edge of the known world and
    America was inhabited solely byaborigines. Yet
    you come to teach us a new faith? I find it very
    strange.
  • The Inn of the Sixth Happiness

7
East Asia
  • Background
  • Culture and Religion
  • Tradition
  • Face
  • 4 Religions
  • Social Issues and Human Rights

8
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Face
  • The perception that others have of you is a
    distinct characteristic of many Asian societies.
  • Face connotes an avoidance of embarrassment,
    failure, defeat or contradiction.

9
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • What is the meaning of face?
  • American students tended to equate the concept of
    face with saving their own face, relating it to
    individual sense of ego and self-worth
  • Japanese students, on the other hand, understand
    the concept of face to be related to honor,
    claimed self image, and more importantly to the
    family/organization

10
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • What is the meaning of face giving?
  • American students could not offer a meaning
  • To Asians, face giving means allowing room for
    the other person to recover his/her face--room to
    maneuver, to negotiate--so both can gain face in
    the end

11
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • What does it mean to lose face?
  • For Americans, loss of face means personal
    failure, loss of self-esteem, or loss of
    self-pride on an individual attribution basis
  • Whereas for Japanese and Korean subjects, loss of
    face means disrupting group harmony, bringing
    shame to their family, classmates, or company.

12
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • How do we deal with losing face?
  • For Americans, humor is a strategy used to
    recover from face loss if that does not work in
    a serious situation, other strategies that may be
    used are defensive strategies and attack
    strategies--clear win-lose strategies.
  • Asian cultures, on the other hand, focus more on
    maintaining the image of a win-win process.

What can you do to help others maintain face?
13
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Guidelines concerning face
  • Be deferential to those above you in age or
    position.
  • Be considerate to those below you in age or
    position.
  • Do not expect Asians to act contrary to group
    norms.
  • Do not insist that your hosts respect your rights
    or opinions.

14
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Guidelines concerning face
  • Do not in any way defy your hosts accepted moral
    standards.?
  • Do not show anger avoid confrontations.
  • If you must say no, try to do so as tactfully as
    possible.
  • If you must criticize, do so in private and with
    expressions of positive regard.
  • As important as Face is something else is more
    important

15
East Asia
  • Background
  • Culture and Religion
  • Tradition
  • Face
  • 4 Religions
  • Social Issues and Human Rights

16
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • 4 Other Main Beliefs/Religions
  • All are ancient beliefs
  • Buddhism
  • Confucianism
  • Daoism
  • Shintoism

Buddha
Daoism
Confucius
Shinto
17
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Buddhism--A religion based on the teachings of
    Siddartha Gautama, an Indian prince who lived in
    the sixth century BCE (before common era)
  • Buddhism is the fourth largest religion in the
    world, being exceeded in numbers only by
    Christianity, Islam and Hinduism.
  • 364 million followers

All religious statistics derived from Number of
Adherents of World Religions at
http//www.religioustolerance.org/worldrel.htm
18
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • The 4 Noble Truths of Buddhism explore human
    suffering
  • 1 Suffering exists Suffering is real almost
    universal. Suffering has many causes loss,
    sickness, pain, failure, the impermanence of
    pleasure.
  • 2 There is a cause for suffering. It is the
    desire to have and control things. It can take
    many forms craving of sensual pleasures the
    desire for fame the desire to avoid unpleasant
    sensations, like fear, anger or jealousy.

19
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • The 4 Noble Truths (continued)
  • 3 There is an end to suffering. Suffering ceases
    with the final liberation of Nirvana. The mind
    experiences complete freedom, liberation and
    non-attachment. It lets go of any desire or
    craving.
  • 4 In order to end suffering, you must follow the
    Eightfold Path.

20
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • The Buddha's Eightfold Path consists of
  • 1) Right Understanding of the Four Noble Truths
  • 2) Right thinking following the right path in
    life

21
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • The Buddha's Eightfold Path continued
  • 3) Right speech no lying, criticism, condemning,
    gossip, harsh language
  • 4) Right conduct by following the Five Precepts

22
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Five Precepts
  • Abstain from harming living beings.
  • Abstain from taking what is not given - stealing.
  • Abstain from sexual misconduct
  • Abstain from false speech, including lying,
    tale-bearing, and gossiping.
  • Abstain from intoxicating drinks and drugs

23
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • The Buddha's Eightfold Path continued
  • 5) Right livelihood support yourself without
    harming others
  • 6) Right Effort promote good thoughts conquer
    evil thoughts

24
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • The Buddha's Eightfold Path continued
  • 7) Right Mindfulness Become aware of your body,
    mind and feelings
  • 8) Right Concentration Meditate to achieve a
    higher state of consciousness
  • Buddhism to Confucianism

25
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Confucianism--Began as a school of thought
    founded by Confucius, a Chinese thinker who lived
    between 551 and 479 BCE
  • This secular "religion" focuses on the conduct
    and practices of people in daily life - the
    creation of a society based on virtue.
  • The teachings of Confucius were never intended to
    be a religion. It has no revelatory sacred
    writings, no priesthood, no doctrine of an
    afterlife
  • 6.3 million followers
  • to Daoism

26
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Daoism--Developed in the 6th century BCE as a way
    of thinking about man's relationship to nature
    and the universe, the Dao means "path" or "way"
    to lead man to live a virtuous life in harmony
    with nature.
  • Daoism does not have a God in the way that the
    Abrahamic religions do. There is no omnipotent
    being beyond the cosmos, who created and controls
    the universe.
  • 2.7 million followers
  • to Shinto

27
East Asian Culture and Religion
  • Shinto ("Way of the Kami") A belief system
    deeply rooted in Japanese culture that attempts
    to explain the relationship between human beings
    and nature.
  • Shinto has no founder, no major scriptures, no
    creed and no religious or ethical laws. It
    doesn't divide the universe into this world and a
    supernatural world, and it has no substantial
    concept of heaven or an afterlife.
  • 2.7 million followers

28
East Asia
  • Background
  • Culture and Religion
  • Tradition
  • Face
  • 4 Religions
  • Social Issues and Human Rights

29
Social Issues and Human Rights
  • East Asia is confronted by a host of social and
    environmental dilemmaswell look at six
  • Widespread poverty
  • Labor exploitation
  • Gender inequality
  • Crime/Corruption
  • East Asian Ethnic Conflicts
  • The Legacy of Japanese Imperialism
  • Foreign Workers
  • Human Rights Concerns

30
Social Issues and Human Rights
  • Poverty and Homelessness
  • 20 of the population in Malaysia, the
    Philippines, and South Korea received less than
    6 of the nations income
  • Many major cities in East Asia have large slum
    areas, frequently with no water, sewage, or
    electrical services
  • Chinas floating population--200 million
  • Most East Asian countries do not have
    government-sponsored welfare safety nets in place
    to help the poor

31
Social Issues and Human Rights
  • 2. Labor Rights and Occupational Safety
  • Many East Asian workers toil long hours for
    little pay.
  • Unions--Discouraged, regulated, or illegal in
    most East Asian countries.
  • Child labor is often preferred--fewer
    problems--more compliant--receive even less pay
    than adults.
  • Sometimes children work for as little as 50 cents
    a day under deplorable conditions.

32
Social Issues and Human Rights
  • 3. Gender Issues
  • Old cultural traditions vice "new" modern
    culture
  • Traditional role of women and new modern role
  • China's export industry depends substantially on
    a female labor force
  • Working women in China are often subjected to
    terrible working conditions, and sometimes even
    physical and sexual abuse.

33
Social Issues and Human Rights
  • Gender Issues (continued)
  • East Asian women who work outside the home are
    criticized for rejecting their traditional roles.
  • Fundamentalists condemn and sometimes physically
    attack Muslim women who have secularized their
    lives

34
Social Issues and Human Rights
  • Gender Issues (continued)
  • Even in modern secular, Singapore, the
    government's official position is that a woman
    cannot legally be the head of a household, even
    if she is the major income earner.
  • Women's movements and women's organizations are
    developing throughout the region as women demand
    equality in society and in the economy

35
Social Issues and Human Rights
  • 4. Crime and Corruption
  • Crime and corruption are also prominent East
    Asian social issues
  • Many of the newly rich are officials or relatives
    of those with political power
  • Selling "protection" is a favorite way to get
    rich
  • Government backlash seen in many
    regions--crackdowns could threaten democracy in
    the region

36
Social Issues and Human Rights
  • 5. East Asian Ethnic Conflicts
  • Centuries-old conflicts between countries or
    nationalities
  • Khmer people and the Vietnamese in Cambodia
  • People of Korean descent and the Japanese in
    Japan
  • Tibetans and the Chinese in Tibet
  • Legacy of Japanese Imperialism
  • Foreign workers
  • Mistreated
  • Not recognized by government
  • No protective social programs

37
Social Issues and Human Rights
  • 6. Human Rights Concerns
  • Some argue that East Asian values legitimize
    limitations on individual rights in favor of
    group rights

38
East Asia Summary
  • Background
  • Culture and Religion
  • Tradition
  • Face
  • 4 Religions
  • Social Issues and Human Rights
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