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    Culture of Japan

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    Culture of Japan The culture of Japan has evolved greatly over the millennia‚ from the country’s prehistoric Jōmon period‚ to its contemporary hybrid culture‚ which combines influences from Asia‚ Europe‚ and North America. The inhabitants of Japan experienced a long period of relative isolation from the outside world during the Tokugawa shogunate‚ until the arrival of "The Black Ships" and the Meiji period. Fūjin and Raijin‚ Tawaraya Sōtatsu‚ 17th century. Pine Trees‚ Hasegawa Tōhaku Japanese

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    Dbq Japanese Internment

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    brought up to this statement. During World War II Japanese American‚ citizens and immigrants‚ were forced from their homes and businesses into concentration camps.Although conditions were horrible and cruel‚ these camps are quite contrasting to the Nazi’s death camps. The U.S. downplayed the event and claimed the Japanese descendents were happy to cooperate with the decision. This leads an inquisitive thinker to the question: why? The internment of Japanese Americans in the U.S. during World War II was

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    THE INVISIBLE JAPANESE GENTLEMEN – (GRAHAM GREENE) Characters The story contains different characters: – A group of eight Japanese gentlemen: Most of them wore glasses and most of the time they were smiling. They talked in a not very understandable language. – A beautiful young lady: Blonde hair and pretty girl. She had thin features and a gorgeous face. She looked very sophisticated. – And her fiancé: He looked very handsome too. He was very similar to her fiancé‚ he looked from the

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    Japanese Auto Industry

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    In order to promote the growth and development of the Japanese auto industry the government began its involvement by obtaining military trucks in 1937 from automakers like‚ Toyota‚ Nissan‚ and Isuzu. General Motors (GM) and Ford had already established factories inside Japan‚ the low tariffs in Japan helped further the incentive to develop foreign factories inside Japan. These foreign factories really hurt Japan’s small automobile manufacturers who could not directly compete with the mass production

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    JAPANESE AMERICAN INTERNMENT FOLLOWING THE ATTACK ON PEARL HARBOR BY PAUL JONES SOUTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE UNIVERSITY 15 JUNE‚ 2014 On December 7th‚ 1941‚ the most horrific attack on American soil‚ by a foreign power occurred; 353 Japanese fighters‚ bombers and torpedo planes launched from six Japanese aircraft carriers‚ dropping their devastating payload upon the unprepared naval base at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu‚ Hawaii. Two months after the attack‚ President Franklin D Roosevelt issued one

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    Japanese American Cultural Considerations The majority of Japanese immigrants began arriving in the United States toward the middle part of the 19th Century. These first Japanese immigrants passed down many characteristics of historic Japanese culture to subsequent generations‚ and these characteristics still abide in the Japanese American psyche (Easton & Ellington‚ 2010). Today‚ Japanese culture is prevalent in many areas of the Western U.S.‚ most notably in the cities of Los Angeles‚ San

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    My name is Makino Toshio and I am a second generation Japanese-American. My father moved to Hawaii before coming to the mainland‚ like most Japanese-Americans. Before World War II‚ I worked on a Japanese truck farm. When Japan attacked Pearl Harbor‚ tension was bad for any Japanese-American in the United States. Many people in the United States did not trust people with Japanese ancestry. A store that I usually shop at had a sign in the window saying‚ "We don’t want any Japs back here-EVER! Within

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    English - Japanese Dictionary

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    than 150‚000 articles in the search database *Learn how almost everything works English−japanese (dictionnaire) English−japanese Dictionary éditions eBooksFrance www.ebooksfrance.com English−japanese Dictionary 1 English−japanese (dictionnaire) Adapted from : http://www.freedict.com/dictionary/index.html English−japanese Dictionary 2 English−japanese (dictionnaire) English−japanese Dictionary 3 English−japanese (dictionnaire) a : ato A−bomb : genshibakudan

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    impact on Japanese politics and economy The triple disaster: earthquake‚ tsunami and Fukushima nuclear accident. The earthquake and tsunami caused extensive and severe structural damage in north-eastern Japan‚ including heavy damage to roads and railways as well as fires in many areas‚ and a dam collapse. Naoto Kan said‚ "In the 65 years after the end of World War II‚ this is the toughest and the most difficult crisis for Japan." Around 4.4 million households in northeastern Japan were left

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    Japanese Pow Camps

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    allied powers fighting for true justice. During the war‚ many allied soldiers‚ especially from the U.S‚ were captured when fighting against europe and japan. They were called prisoners of war or POWs for short. Countries‚ such as Germany and Japan‚ did not follow the set laws‚ enacted by the Geneva Convention‚ that were made to protect

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