Fr. 123.00

Crisis and Disaster in Japan and New Zealand - Actors, Victims and Ramifications

English · Hardback

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Description

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This collection examines a broad spectrum of natural and human-made disasters that have occurred in Japan and New Zealand, including WWII and the atomic bombing of Japan and two recent major earthquake events, the Great East Japan Earthquake and the Christchurch Earthquake, which occurred in 2011. Through these studies, the book provides important insights into the events themselves and their tragic effects, but most significantly a multidisciplinary take on the different cultural responses to disaster, changing memories of disasters over time, the impacts of disaster on different societies, and the challenges post-disaster in reviving communities and traditional cultural practices. Bringing in humanities and social science perspectives to disaster studies, this collection offers a significant contribution to disaster studies.

List of contents

Introduction.- One Flood, Two 'Saviours': Takebe Ayatari's Changing Discourse on the Kanp Floods of 1742.- Writing Shanghai, the Atomic Bomb, and Incest: Homelessness and Stigmatized Womanhood of Hayashi Ky ko.- Resilience of Communities Affected by the Great East Japan Earthquake and Restoration of their Local Festivals.- Foreign Residents' Experiences of the Flyjin Phenomenon in the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake.- The Anthropologist as both disaster victim and disaster researcher: Reflections and Advocacy.- Interpretation of development and representation of disasters in Japan's foreign aid narrative.- 'The confidence to know I can survive': Resilience and recovery in post-quake Christchurch.- Interpreters at the Front Line: Some reflections on the 2011 Christchurch Earthquake.- The Challenge, The Project, and The Politics: Lessons from Six Years of the UC CEISMIC Canterbury Earthquakes Digital Archive.

About the author










Susan Bouterey is Senior Lecturer in Japanese at the department of Global, Cultural and Language Studies, University of Canterbury, New Zealand.

Lawrence E. Marceau is Senior Lecturer in Japanese, Faculty of Arts, School of Cultures, Languages and Linguistics, Asian Studies Disciplinary Area, University of Auckland.

 


Summary

This collection examines a broad spectrum of natural and human-made disasters that have occurred in Japan and New Zealand, including WWII and the atomic bombing of Japan and two recent major earthquake events, the Great East Japan Earthquake and the Christchurch Earthquake, which occurred in 2011. Through these studies, the book provides important insights into the events themselves and their tragic effects, but most significantly a multidisciplinary take on the different cultural responses to disaster, changing memories of disasters over time, the impacts of disaster on different societies, and the challenges post-disaster in reviving communities and traditional cultural practices. Bringing in humanities and social science perspectives to disaster studies, this collection offers a significant contribution to disaster studies.

Product details

Assisted by Susa Bouterey (Editor), Susan Bouterey (Editor), E Marceau (Editor), E Marceau (Editor), Lawrence E. Marceau (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.09.2018
 
EAN 9789811302435
ISBN 978-981-1302-43-5
No. of pages 191
Dimensions 152 mm x 218 mm x 17 mm
Weight 404 g
Illustrations XVII, 191 p. 18 illus.
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories

B, Sociology, Cultural Studies, Social Policy, Ethnology, biotechnology, Social Sciences, The environment, Social Work, Environmental Sociology, Social Service, Social Anthropology, Sociocultural Anthropology, Asian Culture, Ethnology—Asia, Social Work and Community Development

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