|
Product Description
In Waste, Eiko Maruko Siniawer innovatively explores the many ways in which the Japanese have thought about waste―in terms of time, stuff, money, possessions, and resources―from the immediate aftermath of World War II to the present. She shows how questions about waste were deeply embedded in the decisions of everyday life, reflecting the priorities and aspirations of the historical moment, and revealing people’s ever-changing concerns and hopes.
Over the course of the long postwar, Japanese society understood waste variously as backward and retrogressive, an impediment to progress, a pervasive outgrowth of mass consumption, incontrovertible proof of societal excess, the embodiment of resources squandered, and a hazard to the environment. Siniawer also shows how an encouragement of waste consciousness served as a civilizing and modernizing imperative, a moral good, an instrument for advancement, a path to self-satisfaction, an environmental commitment, an expression of identity, and more. From the late 1950s onward, a defining element of Japan’s postwar experience emerged: the tension between the desire for the privileges of middle-class lifestyles made possible by affluence and dissatisfaction with the logics, costs, and consequences of that very prosperity. This tension complicated the persistent search for what might be called well-being, a good life, or a life well lived. Waste is an elegant history of how people lived―how they made sense of, gave meaning to, and found value in the acts of the everyday.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Inheritance of Loss: China, Japan, and the Political Economy of Redemption after Empire (Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute)
- Reconfiguring Modernity: Concepts of Nature in Japanese Political Ideology
- Minamata: Pollution and the Struggle for Democracy in Postwar Japan (Harvard East Asian Monographs)
- Japan at Nature's Edge: The Environmental Context of a Global Power
- Japan's Carnival War: Mass Culture on the Home Front, 1937-1945
- The Gender of Memory (Asia Pacific Modern)
- Sovereignty Experiments: Korean Migrants and the Building of Borders in Northeast Asia, 1860-1945 (Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University)
- Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo
- Floating Coast: An Environmental History of the Bering Strait
- Japan's Imperial Underworlds: Intimate Encounters at the Borders of Empire (Asian Connections)
*If this is not the "Waste: Consuming Postwar Japan" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 28, 2024 03:53 +08.