1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910311934003321

Autore

Rosenberger Nancy Ross

Titolo

Dilemmas of Adulthood : Japanese Women and the Nuances of Long-Term Resistance / / Nancy Rosenberger

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Honolulu : , : University of Hawaiʻi Press, , [2013]

©[2013]

ISBN

0-8248-7089-1

0-8248-3902-1

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (234 p.)

Disciplina

305.40952

Soggetti

Self-perception in women - Japan

Women - Japan

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (pages 195-204) and index.

Nota di contenuto

What is long-term resistance? -- Ambivalence and tension : data meets theory -- Living within the dilemma of choice : singles -- No children despite running the gauntlet of choice -- Planning and cocooning : mothers at home -- Working and raising moral children -- The nuances of long-term resistance.

Sommario/riassunto

In Dilemmas of Adulthood, Nancy Rosenberger investigates the nature of long-term resistance in a longitudinal study of more than fifty Japanese women over two decades. Between 25 and 35 years of age when first interviewed in 1993, the women represent a generation straddling the stable roles of post-war modernity and the risky but exciting possibilities of late modernity. By exploring the challenges they pose to cultural codes, Rosenberger builds a conceptual framework of long-term resistance that undergirds the struggles and successes of modern Japanese women. Her findings resonate with broader anthropological questions about how change happens in our global-local era and suggests a useful model with which to analyze ordinary lives in the late modern world.Rosenberger’s analysis establishes long-term resistance as a vital type of social change in late modernity where the sway of media, global ideas, and friends vies



strongly with the influence of family, school, and work. Women are at the nexus of these contradictions, dissatisfied with post-war normative roles in family, work, and leisure and yet—in Japan as elsewhere—committed to a search for self that shifts uneasily between self-actualization and selfishness. The women’s rich narratives and conversations recount their ambivalent defiance of social norms and attempts to live diverse lives as acceptable adults. In an epilogue, their experiences are framed by the aftermath of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, which is already shaping the future of their long-term resistance.Drawing on such theorists as Ortner, Ueno, the Comaroffs, Melucci, and Bourdieu, Rosenberger posits that long-term resistance is a process of tense, irregular, but insistent change that is characteristic of our era, hammered out in the in-between of local and global, past and future, the old virtues of womanhood and the new virtues of self-actualization. Her book is essential for anyone wishing to understand how Japanese women have maneuvered their lives in the economic decline and pushed for individuation in the 1990s and 2000s.