What is the difference between japan and korea




















Both systems are highly competitive. As a result, both cultures have high-pressure schooling with emphasis on high testing scores.

Reverence for elders and prioritizing work-ethic also manifests in long, often unpaid, hours at the office six days a week. It is disrespectful to leave before your boss. Such prioritization of work has lead both countries to success as tech giants, while also having a hand in skyrocketing their suicide rates and tanking their fertility rates.

When it comes to work ethic, both Japanese and Korean cultures work hard, but in slightly different ways. Both societies have a similar work ethic and value efficiency and order. They each boast a highly effective workforce. Japanese culture is more accepting of a natural balance to things that requires everyone to dutifully follow procedural steps and consistently fill their role.

Korean culture is more fast-paced and cutthroat, with more inter-personal competition. This difference in work styles demonstrates how collectivism in Japan is more societal, while collectivism in Korea is more family-oriented and less sociological. Despite their geographic proximity, Korea and Japan also have very different religions.

The most common religion in Korea is Christianity, followed closely by buddhism. Japan on the other hand is composed mainly of Shintoism, followed by buddhism. These two countries both share a sense of collectivism. Collectivism is the opposite of individualism, which favors freedom of individuals over collective or state control. In collectivism, the individual is subordinate to the state, nation, race, or social class.

In Japanese culture , this collectivism is more society-centered and in Korea, this is more family-centered. This means that though they apply the same values, Korean values reflect internal collectivism while Japanese values reflect external collectivism.

Primarily due to social pressure, Korea and Japan are largely crime- and drug-free cultures. Free time is not as prioritized as hard work and discipline, which has lead both nations to popularize martial arts, based in a long-standing history of warrior training. Japan has also had less demand for combat as an island nation, so its ancient warrior practices like Sumo wrestling involve a lot of philosophy and spirituality in addition to physical technique.

Want to know more about sumo? Home life between Japan and Korea can look similar: shoes removed at the entrance of a home, and floor seating instead of table seating. However, the social tone between a Korean and a Japanese home will be very different. When chumming around with friends in Korea be prepared for a ribbing—friendly teasing stemming from affection but which can seem mean or rude to an outsider.

However, the small urban apartments of Korea prevent many dinner parties, compared to Japan whose housing is more individual houses. In terms of the cultural sphere of romantic relationships, Japan and Korea are very different.

Koreans are more casually touchy and friendly towards strangers, while Japan has very little public displays of affection, and sometimes very little private displays of affection as well.

Of course, everyone has to enjoy going out to eat sometimes. One similarity between Korean and Japanese culture dining is that both countries use chopsticks to eat, but Japan uses thin, pointed bamboo chopsticks to delicately de-bone fish, and Korea uses metal chopsticks that can survive the heat of Korean barbeque, along with forks and spoons.

It is up to the chef, not the customer, to decide food pairings which are usually subdued flavors. In Korean Barbeque, however, foods are simpler with bold, spicy flavors and endless combinations for the customers to create.

To taste the difference between the two cultures in a very comparable setting, both Ramen noodle soup and Bibimbap are go-to bowl meals with various ingredients and often topped with an egg. Whereas Ramen follows a pretty standardized list of ingredients including wheat noodles and broth, and a skill which one can master, a quick search for bibimbap recipes has three entirely different lists of ingredients.

So once again Japanese culture has an artful formula with less variation, and Korean culture is more about bold yet simple formulas with more variation. If you want to read more on Ramen and its technique, you could check out this book by Naomi Imatome-Yun.

When it comes to paying, in Korea it is expected that the highest ranking person at the table will pay for the whole meal, while in Japan splitting the bill is more common.

You can read more about Japanese food here. Japanese culture is based on subtlety, nature, and quality. In general, I would say that the shortest itinerary you can get away with for your first trip is 3 weeks in Japan vs about a 10 days in Korea itinerary. Regardless of what you end up deciding RE: Japan or Korea travel i. This is at once a matter of nuts and bolts which cities and regions in Japan do you visit, and how do you structure your food trip to Korea as it is an esoteric question: How do you want to feel when you step back on the plane to go home, and how do you translate that into an itinerary?

The main difference between Korea vs Japan, in my opinion, is that technology is slightly more important than tradition in Korea, while slightly less so in Japan. Additionally, while both Korea and Japan are relatively xenophobic countries, I feel that the Japanese tend to tolerate foreigners better, at least in public.

What do you think is the impact on Japanese culture and arts relating to both coutries relations? Beautifully written.. Living in Britain, i have been watching several korean, say KBC, serials since the lockdown on Netflix..

Great culture, sometimes get a feel thAT koreans are more money minded than anyone else?? Culture of Asia. There are, in fact, so many similarities between Japan and Korea. It sometimes confuses Westerners. However, both countries have their own unique culture and rich history. And they are actually very different if you see them in depth.

So here are 10 major cultural differences between Japan and Korea. Table of Contents 1. Language 2. Cultural Influence From Others 3. Food 4. Confucianism 5. Religion 6. Where did that even come from?! Yes, I understand that there are Japanese hating Koreans and all, doing very offensive things to offend Japanese people.

My grand parents principles were Japanese during the Japanese control. The students were to learn Japanese and forget Korean. So when my grand parents visited us or vice versa, they tended to mix some japanese words in their conversation on accident without knowing..

But what I am curious about is why is that some Japanese also hate Koreans? Some people said that it was because Koreans open up Japanese restraunts in America. I told my mom about the Japan hate Korea for restraunt thing and she said that they should be thankful for us spreading and getting Japanese food to be well known in America. I laughed at that. Well I tried to be as neutral and safe as I could.

Have a good day!! Heck, if anything, Japan fabricates more than Korea. I am a Korean. Japan and Korea is next to each to other. While Government and some people do mistake, we should work on how to step forward rather than trying to beat neighbour country. Japan is a amazing country that has high standard of culture and technology. I also am proud of my country, too. The best country is the one who try to work on peace and friendship, not on a sense of superior.

This is something that should be redressed by Japan, and not ignored. The fact that Japan is now a mostly pacifist country is not part of the general awareness of a person who grows up in China. I mean, like stereotypically.. Or what do some people usually say is the difference between them? If you were to look at the modern cultures at a glance but not truly in depth, Korean girls may seem more outgoing.

In relationships some like to act cute or charming and not so much sexy as western girls act. From some observation the korean youth seems more westernized in some ways because they seem to have more fun.

Japanese girls seem to be more reserved and keep more things private. But, all traits can be seen in both countries, this are just some observations from what it seems they like to promote in the media. Korean boys seem to like to have more fun but Japanese boys probably do as well, and this goes for all ages.

I think Korean men like to drink even though they take business seriously some get drunk on the streets of Seoul after work. Korea also admires their culture and medicine etc. Japanese tend to be surprised if foreigners are fluent in Japanese more than anything. Of course these are all observations.

There are various after school programs and media and signs are covered in english. There is so much exposure to english relative to Japan in korea, that it remains one of the major differences between the two countries.

Kirstan, Koreans show more affection in public than Japanese when they are a couple, surely not much as westerners. Hugging and holding hands in public is very common in Korea where in Japan is seldom.

Korean girls dress very classic while Japanese girls do to but more adventurous. In both countries pale skin is prized and girls seldom tan.

Korean guys are definitely taller and bigger in general, look up world stats. Korean guys are more tempermental than Japanese guys in general. Both countries have an unhealthy drinking culture.



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