Parallel & Proverbs
A weekly literary miscellany

East Asia has one of the deepest written proverb traditions on earth. Chinese chéngyǔ — four-character idioms drawn from classical literature — sit alongside Japanese kotowaza, Korean sokdam, and the more recent vernacular sayings of each country.

What’s distinctive about the region is the long literary memory: a proverb in modern Tokyo can carry an echo from a Tang dynasty poem, transmitted through centuries of borrowing and reinterpretation. The Confucian inheritance is visible in proverbs about hierarchy and restraint; the Buddhist one in proverbs about impermanence; the daily-life layer in everything else.

By country

  • China 5 essays
  • South Korea 2 essays
  • Japan 1 essay

Themes most represented