Difference between Chinese and Korean 2
- Intermarriage: though Koreans
tend to be more insular and ethnocentric, the #1 ethnicity they will marry
(outside of their own race) is Chinese. I chalk this up more to Christianity
than cultural similarity—though there is that too. The culture most similar to Korean is
Japanese, but that will never take off in terms of intermarriage, because of
two reasons: 1) history (the Japanese attacked and occupied and oppressed Korea
during WWII, and the Koreans will never forget it), 2) Christianity (Japanese
are the second-most resistant people to Christianity in this world after
Muslims). Think about it: how many Japanese-Korean marriages do you know? I
know two couples who fit that description. In contrast, I know quite a few
Chinese-Korean couples.
- Hierarchy: Japanese and Koreans are very
hierarchical—this comes from Confucianism. They respect elders and speak in
honorifics. Chinese, despite the fact that Confucius came from China, are much
more egalitarian (I’m not using this with reference to gender but rather to
class) due to Communism. A Korean teacher or pastor should be
obeyed, no questions. With the Chinese, house churches spring up everywhere
because it is largely classless nowadays, and thus it breeds the “priesthood of
all believers.” Malcolm Gladwell controversially wrote in his book Outliers
about Korean hierarchical communication.
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