Críticas:
?Interestingly, Kumagai, a Japanese sociologist who studied in the US and now teaches in Japan, came to see Japan as an outsider looking in... [she] discusses aspects of everyday life, such as the family, education, socialization of the elderly, and their changing patterns...Recommended for undergraduates.?-Choice "Interestingly, Kumagai, a Japanese sociologist who studied in the US and now teaches in Japan, came to see Japan as an outsider looking in... [she] discusses aspects of everyday life, such as the family, education, socialization of the elderly, and their changing patterns...Recommended for undergraduates."-Choice
Reseña del editor:
Modern-day Japan has proven to be a complex nation struggling to combine traditional attitudes with the political and social demands of an advanced industrialized economy. This struggle to balance the past with the present has had a significant impact on the structure of human relations in contemporary Japan, particularly in the areas of the family and family dynamics, lifestyles, the education of children, the socialization of youth, women in the workplace, and the elderly. In all cases, we find a dual structure where traditional values and modern practices coexist. Based on a dual perspective that incorporates modern Western capitalism into Japan's traditional agrarian society, this book reveals a complex of cultural assumptions that determine the manners and customs of the Japanese people.
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