Japan, 1972: Visions of Masculinity in an Age of Mass Consumerism
By the early 1970s, Japan had become an affluent consumer society, riding a growing economy to widely shared prosperity. In the aftermath of the fiery political activism of 1968, the country settled down to the realization that consumer culture had taken a firm grip on Japanese society. Japan, 1972...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | By the early 1970s, Japan had become an affluent consumer society,
riding a growing economy to widely shared prosperity. In the
aftermath of the fiery political activism of 1968, the country
settled down to the realization that consumer culture had taken a
firm grip on Japanese society. Japan, 1972 takes an
early-seventies year as a vantage point for understanding how
Japanese society came to terms with cultural change. Yoshikuni
Igarashi examines a broad selection of popular film, television,
manga, and other media in order to analyze the ways Japanese
culture grappled with this economic shift. He exposes the political
underpinnings of mass culture and investigates deeper anxieties
over questions of agency and masculinity. Igarashi underscores how
the male-dominated culture industry strove to defend masculine
identity by looking for an escape from the high-growth economy. He
reads a range of cultural works that reveal perceptions of
imperiled Japanese masculinity through depictions of heroes' doomed
struggles against what were seen as the stifling and feminizing
effects of consumerism. Ranging from manga travelogues to war
stories, yakuza films to New Left radicalism, Japan, 1972
sheds new light on a period of profound socioeconomic change and
the counternarratives of masculinity that emerged to manage it. |
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DOI: | 10.7312/igar19554 |