http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/fourth_world/22057/2
http://worldfocus.org/blog/2010/02/22/japans-indigenous-ainu-people-struggle-to-keep-way-of-life/9780/
Some various forms of arts are the flower arranging, pottery and ceramics, Japanese paintings, calligraphy, Japanese paper, bamboo, Japanese drama, puppet plays and traditional music.
Waka (Japanese poems)
Cuisine and diet
Since ancient times, these food have been the mainstray of the Japanese diet. They are rice, raw fish such as sashimi, noodles, soybean paste and soy sauce.
Below is what a typical Japanese meal will consist of:
Breakfast
Traditional breakfast required cooking rice, making miso soup, grilling dried fish and slicking pickled vegetables.
Lunch
Bento is the most common for eating away from home.
Dinner
Traditional concept of a dinner is a meal made up staple food and accompanying dishes.
Religion and spirituality
The spirit of Zen Buddhism is present in contemporary Japan. Other religious forms of spirituality are the shrines, Good Luck Charms, The Red- Bibbed Deity and The Samurai Code.
Household religion
Every family has an ancestral altar in the house where they offer prayer at the altar everyday.
Rituals for the dead
A funeral is rite for sending the deceased to the other world.
Tea Ceremony
The classical tea ceremony had orginated in the 13th century when Zen Buddhist monks pass the tea cup among themselves in an effort to stay alert for their religious duties. In the teahouse the guest kneels in silence on the tatami mats facing the tea kettle. The host then eners the tea ceremony utensils and arranges them in an artistic and harmonious pattern. The same bowl is shared by all the participants, adding to the effect of a shared event. When the tea bowl is passed, the guest raises it and drinks all of the liquid. A simple ceremony may last for about twenty minutes.
The various type of sports that the Japanese does are Sumo, baseball, football, golf, winter sports such as skiing as snowboarding, basketball, ice hockey, volleyball, judo, martial arts, motorsports, rugby, table-tennis and tennis.
Leisure
The Japanese engage in various leisure actitives such as drinking, going to clubs and pubs, theatre and opera, museums and art galleries and retail therapies.
Like all the other theme park, it consists of a retail shop where tourists are able to bring home a tangible item of their experience to add on to their memories of their visit. Souvenirs and products such as keychains, shirts and stationaries printed with the Universal Studio Logo are legalised tangible merchandise. These products are mass produced for sales under the license of the Universal Studio. This is evident that there is merchandising, whereby there is the sales of goods in the form or bearing copyrighted images or logos.
With tourism, many parts of Japan culture have been preserved and conserved so that they can be showcased to the public. At the same time, it acts as a platform to reach out to others their past and present; their story. Tourism also brings about peace as it gives tourist and the locals the chance to interact with one another, building mutual undertsanding and reducing prejudice. It helps different countries to be more tolerant and acceptable towards cultural differences.
However, tourism might adversely cause the effect of cultural erosion due to commodification and commercialisation. If the authenticity of the culture of Japan is gone, then tourists will not be able to recieve the true essence of the culture. Also, since there is this cultural exchange between countries, locals in Japan may lean towards the westernized culture instead of their own culture, as seen from the disneyization above.