Fr. 70.00

Japanese Media and the Intelligentsia After Fukushima - Disaster Culture

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

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How and why does a catastrophic disaster change public discourse and social narratives? This is the first book to comprehensively investigate how Japanese newspapers, TV, documentary films, independent journalists, scientists, and intellectuals from the humanities and social sciences have critically responded to the Fukushima nuclear disaster over the last decade.

In Japan, nuclear power consistently had more than 70% support in opinion polls. However, the Fukushima disaster of 2011 has caused a shift in public opinion, and the majority of the population now desires an end to nuclear power in Japan. Alternative energy and countermeasures against climate change have thus become hot-button issues in public discourse. Moreover, topics previously left undiscussed have become common talking points among journalists and intellectuals: Concealed power structural dynamics that work upon Japan's politics, bureaucracy, industry, academia, and media; Japan's peculiar, strong support for nuclear power, despite being a nation subjected to the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and its latent ability to develop nuclear weapons by utilizing the plutonium generated by its power plants; and Japan's dependence on the US' nuclear umbrella. These discussions have often evolved into macro-level controversies over 'Japan' and its 'modernity'. In this book, Hidaka critically evaluates how the Fukushima disaster has shaken hegemonic public discourse and compares it to the impact of previous moments of 'disaster culture' in modern Japanese history, such as The Great Kanto Earthquake and the Pacific War.

Offers vital insights into contemporary Japanese culture and social discourse for students and scholars alike.

List of contents










Introduction: The Fukushima Nuclear Disaster Ten Years On 1. A Topology of the Mainstream Media: Newspapers and Television 2. Scepticism and Resistance: Scientists and Independent Journalists 3. The Struggle for 'Japan': The Intellectuals of the Humanities and Social Sciences 4. Documentary Films and Nuclear Power: Grassroots Movements, Democracy, and Opposition to the Mainstream Media Conclusions


About the author

Katsuyuki Hidaka is Professor of Media and Cultural Studies at Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto, Japan. He is also a professorial research associate at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, from which he received his Ph.D. degree. His publications include Japanese Media at the Beginning of the twenty-first century: Consuming the Past (Routledge 2017), a winner of the Japan Communication Association Best Book Award.

Summary

Hidaka analyses the ways in which the Fukushima disaster has changed and divided opinions of nuclear power, and of national identity, in Japan. In Japan, nuclear power consistently had more than 70% support in opinion polls. The Fukushima disaster changed everything.

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