General Information about Japan.
The “Land of the Rising Sun” is a country where the past meets the future. Japanese culture stretches back millennia, yet has also been quick to adopt and created the latest modern fashions and trends.
Japan is often difficult to understand for those educated in the west. It can seem full of contradictions. Many Japanese corporations dominate their industries, yet if you read the financial news it seems like Japan is practically bankrupt. Cities are as modern and high tech as anywhere else, but tumbledown wooden shacks can still be spotted next to glass fronted designer condominiums. On an average subway ride, you might see childishly cute character toys and incredibly violent pornography – sometimes enjoyed by the same passenger, at the same time! Japan has beautiful temples and gardens which are often surrounded by garish signs and ugly buildings. The most acclaimed restaurant in the country, which costs hundreds of dollars for dinner, is a small shop located in a subway station seating less than a dozen people. In the middle of modern skyscrapers you’ll discover sliding wooden doors which lead to traditional chambers with tatami mats, shoji screens, and calligraphy, suitable for traditional tea ceremonies. These juxtapositions can seem perplexing or jarring to those used to the more uniform nature of European and North American cities, but if you let go, and accept the layered aesthetics, you’ll find interesting and surprising places throughout the country.
Japan has often been seen in the West as a land combining tradition and modernity, and many traditional structures and practices are preserved, but modern structures and practices definitely dominate your experience in Japan. Japan was the first Asian country to independently modernize, and the country continues to embrace new technologies and aesthetics, but unlike in many countries, Japan does not feel a particular need to attack or remove older technologies, structures, or practices. New things are mostly just layered beside old things. That’s not to say that Japan embraces the large scale preservation of historical structures or that people generally practice traditional ceremonies, but people generally believe that if a small number of people want to continue on a tradition or preserve a building that they own, they should be allowed to do that. In this way, development mostly happens in a piecemeal fashion, one building at a time, rather than in large redevelopment projects. Many urban blocks evolve to line up dozens of narrow buildings spanning fifty or more years of design history. Clothing styles evolve along a dozen paths at the same time rather than singular mass fashion trends. An individual that embraces a particular subculture and its fashions may alternatively conform to very different norms when working or at home, but there is little sense of conflict between these roles.
Trip Highlights
- Airlines: Air Nippon
- Hotels Category: 4 Star
- Transportation: AC Coach
Major Sightseeing
Asakusa, Sumida River Cruise, Tokyo Tower, Odaiba Beach, Sumo Wrestling Practice Area, Mount Fushi, Lake Ashi with cruising, Komagatake Ropeway, Hakone Shrine, Fruit Park, Shinkansen(Bullet Train) Ride, Nagoya Castle, Deer Park, Todaiji Temple, Nijo Castle, Kyoto Imperial Palace, Kinkaku Temple
Shopping Experiences
Asakusa, Nakamise Street, Gotemba Premium Outlets, Gion Shopping Corner (On direct payment)
Nightlife Options
Tokyo Nightlife Area, Kyoto Nightlife(Self Experience- At own expense)