Making neo-nationalist subject in Japan: The intersection of nationalism, jingoism, and populism in the digital age

IF 1.2 Q3 COMMUNICATION
Satofumi Kawamura, Koichi Iwabuchi
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This article considers how digital media communication reconfigures a “neo-nationalist subject” in the Japanese context. A neo-nationalist subject is not the so-called modern national subject that maintains a shared, collective identity as the rationale regulating his or her decisions and behavior, but rather is a fragmented subject that, in view of “the decline of symbolic efficiency,” is open to discourses that others are in effect stealing his or her “enjoyment” (jouissance). Starting from an overview of the rise of cyber-nationalism and the popularity of neoliberal authoritarian governance in Japan since the 1990s, we explore how affect-driven digital media environments promoted by a neoliberal economy produce neo-nationalist subjects who attribute responsibility for their dissatisfaction with life to others, and whose self-defensive “drive” functions as the primary support of the culture of hate and modern racism. In this way, we offer an account for the intersection of nationalism, jingoism, and populism in the digital age.
日本的新民族主义主体:数字时代民族主义、沙文主义和民粹主义的交集
本文探讨数字媒体传播如何在日本语境下重新配置一个“新民族主义主题”。一个新民族主义主体不是所谓的现代国家主体,它维持着一种共同的、集体的身份,作为规范他或她的决定和行为的基本原理,而是一个碎片化的主体,鉴于“象征效率的下降”,它对别人实际上正在窃取他或她的“享受”(欢欢)的话语是开放的。从概述20世纪90年代以来日本网络民族主义的兴起和新自由主义威权治理的流行开始,我们探讨了新自由主义经济推动的影响驱动的数字媒体环境如何产生新民族主义主体,这些主体将对生活不满的责任归咎于他人,其自我防御的“驱动力”作为仇恨文化和现代种族主义的主要支持。通过这种方式,我们阐述了数字时代民族主义、沙文主义和民粹主义的交集。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
2.80%
发文量
13
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