Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Japanese culture in tea ceremony

Japanese culture in tea ceremony

Tea ceremony is the essence of Japanese culture. The Japanese attach great importance to the protection of traditional culture. Tea ceremony culture, like being engraved in the blood of Yamato nation, is continuously passed down and carried forward.

Keigo Higashino, a famous Japanese suspense writer, once mentioned it in his graduation book "The Form of Snow Moon Flowers-Rites in Tea Ceremony". Although rigorous, following certain rules can also be understood as a more fun game. Keigo Higashino used the snow moon flower to promote the plot development, which led to the plot of Bo Xiang's murder.

In fact, the tea ceremony culture embodies the national spirit of Japan. Yamato people strive for perfection, but their emotions are delicate. Those complicated rules better show the essence of Japanese tea ceremony culture, and at the same time make the ceremony feel elegant and heavy. This is the Japanese respect for traditional culture, and it is also the Japanese love for traditional culture.

The Yamato nation strives for perfection, not only because of its numerous rules, but also because of the word "persistence". In fact, the tea ceremony culture and even Japanese culture, because of the preservation of these rules, have always maintained the original simplicity. In Japan, many people only open one shop and pass it on to future generations. They don't want to win too much profit, but they want to persist in passing on their skills. This reflects the persistence of Japanese tea ceremony culture and the spirit of Japanese craftsmen.

Compared with China culture, Japanese culture is relatively simple. But this does not mean that Japanese culture is superficial. Japanese culture has developed more finely because of historical polishing and tempering. It is also in the long history that Japanese tea ceremony culture shows its unique color through continuous inheritance.

Senior three/kloc-class 0/8? Chen Liwei