1st Edition
Routledge Companion to Contemporary Japanese Social Theory From Individualization to Globalization in Japan Today
Contributors. Acknowledgements. Editor’s Introduction. Part 1: Traditions of Social Thought 1. Phenomenological Sociology in Japan and its Significance for Contemporary Social Research by Kazuhisa Nishihara. Prelude by Nick Crossley 2. Critical Theory and its Development in Post-War Japanese Sociology: Pursuing True Democracy in Rapid Capitalist Modernization by Takeshi Deguchi. Prelude by Axel Honneth 3. Japanese Psychoanalysis as Deciphering the Japanese Unconsciousness and Supporting the Japanese Subject by Aiko Kashimura. Prelude by Anthony Elliott 4. Structuralism, Post-Structuralism and Thereafter by Masahiro Ogino. Prelude by Daniel Chaffee 5. Acceptance of Beck’s Theory in Japan: From Environmental Risks to Individualization by Midori Ito and Munenori Suzuki. Prelude by Roland Robertson Part 2: Issues in Japanese Social Theory 6. The Three Selves in Japanese Society: Individualized, Privatized, and Psychologized Selves by Masataka Katagiri. Prelude by Anthony Elliott 7. Japanese Feminist Social Theory and Gender Equality by Yumiko Ehara. Prelude by Chilla Bulbeck and Laura Dales 8. Network, Community and Culture by Tomohiko Asano. Prelude by Sam Han 9. Postmodernity by Atsushi Sawai. Prelude by Eric Hsu 10. Globalization by Kiyomitsu Yui. Prelude by Bryan S. Turner Afterword: Apollo’s Chariot by Charles Lemert
Biography
Anthony Elliott is Chair of Sociology at Flinders University, Australia and Visiting Research Professor at the Open University, UK. His recent books include Mobile Lives (Routledge, 2010, with John Urry) and On Society (Polity Press, 2012, with Bryan S. Turner).
Masataka Katagiri is a Professor at Chiba University, Chiba. His recent books include Jiko no Hakken: Shakaigaku-shi no Furontia ([Discovery of the Self: Frontier of the History of Sociology], Seakai-shiso-sha, 2011) and Ninchi Shakaigaku no Koso: Kategori, Jiko, Shakai ([The Basic Idea of Cognitive Sociology: Category, Self and Society], Sekai-shiso-sha, 2006).
Atsushi Sawai is Professor of Sociology at Keio University, Tokyo. His recent books include Karl Manheim: Jidai o Shindansuru Bomeisha ([Karl Mannheim: An Exile Diagnosing an Epoch], Toshin-do, 2004) and Shi to Shibetsu no Shakaigaku ([The Sociology of Death and Bereavement: A Social Theory Approach], Seikyu-sha, 2005).






