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Keiko Sono's avatar

Thank you for writing about this, Noah! I’m a quarter Japanese and 3/4 Taiwanese but was born and grew up in Japan, only speaking Japanese and knowing its culture. Our family naturalized when I was little so no one knew I wasn’t Japanese. But I never felt I was fully accepted which caused pain when young, even though I never experienced direct discrimination.

It’s not just about ancestry or how you look in Japan... it’s about how much you accept being Japanese and never question anything to disrupt the harmony. Many of my cousins had no problem assimilating. This is why I don’t find it odd that Japanese government doesn’t collect data about race. What’s important is the “nori,” going with the flow. If you behave in complete harmony, they tend to accept you no matter how you look. I couldn’t, and that’s why I’m American now.

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Razib Khan's avatar

i know this isn't a genetics piece, but let me add my gene-sense

1) the yamato ppl are a mix of rice farmers + post-jomon hunter-gatherers

2) the average is 80-90% of the former with 20-10% latter

3) there is a bit of variation in japan, but not much. more post-jomon in the far northeast and in southern kyushu (toward okinawa).

if we could get a 'random sample' of ppl from japan we could actually estimate ancestry from other groups pretty well (koreans pop out of japanese samples for example)

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