Working Worlds in Neoliberal Japan: Precarity, Imagination, and the "Other-World" Trope

IF 0.4 4区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Brett Hack
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:This article analyzes depictions of work in postmillennial Japanese media, particularly anime and manga, in order to theorize the function of imaginative responses to the social dislocations of neoliberalism. Critical studies of precarity in Japanese popular culture have tended to treat depictions of work as direct representations of actual socioeconomic conditions, overlooking the affective, experiential dimensions of mediated work images and their potential for imagining social relations beyond imposed precarity. The article explores this neglected potential by focusing on the anime and manga trope of isekai (other-world), which depicts life and work in a fantastic environment. These depictions are compared with analogues in live-action films and television during the period of Japan's neoliberalization. Invoking philosophical concepts of social imagination and drawing on autonomist theory for inspiration regarding the visualization of postcapitalist sociality, analysis will demonstrate how their imaginative responses can produce visions of collectivity amenable to postcapitalist projects without explicitly political content. The article hopes to draw out latent capacities within superficially escapist media forms and offer a possible counternarrative to pessimistic discourses about popular culture.
新自由主义日本的工作世界:不稳定性、想象力和“另一个世界”的比喻
摘要:本文分析了后千禧年日本媒体对作品的描绘,特别是动漫和漫画,以理论化对新自由主义社会错位的想象力反应的功能。对日本流行文化中不稳定性的批判性研究倾向于将工作描述视为实际社会经济条件的直接代表,忽视了中介工作图像的情感和经验维度,以及它们想象超越强加不稳定性的社会关系的潜力。这篇文章通过关注动画和漫画中的“另一个世界”来探索这种被忽视的潜力,“另一个世界”描绘了在一个梦幻般的环境中生活和工作。这些描述与日本新自由主义化时期的真人电影和电视中的类似内容进行了比较。通过引用社会想象的哲学概念,并借鉴自主主义理论来获得关于后资本主义社会形象化的灵感,分析将证明他们富有想象力的反应如何能够产生符合后资本主义项目的集体愿景,而不需要明确的政治内容。本文希望挖掘表面上逃避现实的媒体形式的潜在能力,并为大众文化的悲观话语提供一种可能的反叙事。
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
Positions-Asia Critique
Positions-Asia Critique ASIAN STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
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