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Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Note on Transliteration -- Glossary and Abbreviations -- Introduction: The Moral Imaginations of Becoming One -- Chapter 1. A History of the Nonreligious -- Chapter 2. The Politics of "Shinto" Environmentalism -- Chapter 3. Making a Universal Furusato (Homeplace) -- Chapter 4. Muddy Labor -- Chapter 5. Being Like Family -- Chapter 6. Discipline as Care -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Index -- About the Author
In: Public culture, Band 33, Heft 2, S. 239-259
ISSN: 1527-8018
AbstractThere is a growing trend to prepare children for future disasters. A Japanese nonprofit organization has developed an event called Iza! Kaeru Caravan, which includes games that teach children and their families how to survive disasters, from earthquakes to floods. Many disaster experts and government officials from other countries have now implemented the Caravan in their own contexts. Based on ethnographic research in Japan and Chile, this article shows how playful methods in disaster preparedness orient children, and by proxy their families, to accept an apocalyptic future, helping the neoliberal state buy time. Advocates of disaster preparedness in Japan and Chile accept that state actors will not come immediately to the rescue. Playful methods mobilize children and their families to take responsibility for their own survival through the subjunctive work of the "as if." Ambiguously positioned between fun and education, playful methods of preparedness command attention from children and adults—what I call "attentive play"—as they frame and reframe the games to figure out, "Is this play?" Ultimately, the article shows that attentive play buys time for the state to temporarily defer its responsibilities to citizens, but the ambiguity of play can also exceed its ideological effects.
In: http://hdl.handle.net/10125/65983
International development programs strive not only to alleviate poverty but to transform people, aid workers and recipients alike. Becoming One grapples with this process by exploring the work of OISCA*, a prominent Japanese NGO in central Myanmar. OISCA's postwar origins at the intersection of Shinto, secularism, and rightwing politics, and its vision of inter-Asian solidarity and a sustainable future helped shape the organization's ideology and activities. By delving into the world of its aid workers—their everyday practices, discourses, and aspirations—author Chika Watanabe seeks to understand the NGO's political, social, and ethical effects. At OISCA training centers, Japanese and local staff teach sustainable agricultural skills and organic farming methods to rural youth. Much of the teaching involves laboring in the fields, harvesting produce, and caring for livestock: what they can't use themselves is sold at nearby markets. Watanabe's detailed and multi-sited ethnography shows how Japanese and Burmese actors mobilize around the idea of "becoming one" with Mother Earth and their human counterparts within a shared communal lifestyle. By exploring the tension between intentions and political effects—spanning environmentalism, cultural-nationalist ideologies of "Japaneseness," and aspirations to make the world a better place—Watanabe highlights fascinating questions and both positive and negative outcomes. Becoming One weaves together vivid descriptions of the intensive, intimate, and "muddy labor" of "making persons" (hitozukuri) with the wider historical resonances of these efforts, decentering common understandings of development, NGOs, and their moral and political promises. This engaging and thought-provoking book combines insights from anthropology, development studies, and religious studies to add to our understanding of modern Japan. *Organization for Industrial, Spiritual and Cultural Advancement The open-access edition of this title was made possible with generous support from the University of ...
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International development programs strive not only to alleviate poverty but to transform people, aid workers and recipients alike. Becoming One grapples with this process by exploring the work of OISCA*, a prominent Japanese NGO in central Myanmar. OISCA's postwar origins at the intersection of Shinto, secularism, and rightwing politics, and its vision of inter-Asian solidarity and a sustainable future helped shape the organization's ideology and activities. By delving into the world of its aid workers—their everyday practices, discourses, and aspirations—author Chika Watanabe seeks to understand the NGO's political, social, and ethical effects. At OISCA training centers, Japanese and local staff teach sustainable agricultural skills and organic farming methods to rural youth. Much of the teaching involves laboring in the fields, harvesting produce, and caring for livestock: what they can't use themselves is sold at nearby markets. Watanabe's detailed and multi-sited ethnography shows how Japanese and Burmese actors mobilize around the idea of "becoming one" with Mother Earth and their human counterparts within a shared communal lifestyle. By exploring the tension between intentions and political effects—spanning environmentalism, cultural-nationalist ideologies of "Japaneseness," and aspirations to make the world a better place—Watanabe highlights fascinating questions and both positive and negative outcomes. Becoming One weaves together vivid descriptions of the intensive, intimate, and "muddy labor" of "making persons" (hitozukuri) with the wider historical resonances of these efforts, decentering common understandings of development, NGOs, and their moral and political promises. This engaging and thought-provoking book combines insights from anthropology, development studies, and religious studies to add to our understanding of modern Japan.
In: Anthropological quarterly: AQ, Band 92, Heft 1, S. 59-84
ISSN: 1534-1518
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 117, Heft 3, S. 468-479
ISSN: 1548-1433
ABSTRACTThe rise of debt as a mechanism of development troubles many scholars and aid practitioners. Contrary to these concerns, however, ethnographic research at a Japanese NGO in Myanmar showed that Japanese and Burmese aid workers found value in moral and monetary debt relations. In this article, I argue that these aid workers viewed indebtedness as a precondition for the making of voluntary actors, willing and committed to aid work. What they problematized was not indebtedness but, rather, competing understandings of the appropriate temporality of a debt's repayment. The fault lines did not appear along cultural or moral‐monetary boundaries; they existed in the ways that people conceptualized voluntary actors as emerging from either long‐term forms of indebted gratitude or sequences of short‐term contractual agreements. While the entrapment of the poor in cycles of debt remains an increasing concern in the world, I here ask how we might understand local aid workers' professional commitments when they do not question indebtedness as a moral framework.
In: Current anthropology, Band 55, Heft 5, S. 665-666
ISSN: 1537-5382
In: Political and legal anthropology review: PoLAR, Band 36, Heft 1, S. 75-98
ISSN: 1555-2934
This article examines ideas of the past in the development aid work of one of the oldest Japanese NGOs, the Organization for Industrial, Spiritual and Cultural Advancement (OISCA), derived from a Shinto‐based new religion, and its training courses on sustainable agriculture in Burma/Myanmar. Whereas Japan's official discourses on aid focus on postwar national success, OISCA highlights a sense of national– cultural loss and proposes aid as a form of national renewal by using ideas about Japan's past to "redo" modernity elsewhere. This emphasis on pastness was an effect of OISCA staff asserting that it is a "nonreligious" organization and simply "Japanese." This article demonstrates how hope for national renewal through development aid generates "redemptive dreams" and enacts a politics of temporality in which Japanese and Burmese aid actors contest over the past as resource for the future and over "Japaneseness" as a universal value, oscillating between oppressive and aspirational possibilities.
In: The journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Band 27, Heft 1, S. 7-8
ISSN: 1467-9655
In: Critical Studies in Risk and Disaster
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Introduction -- Introducing Critical Disaster Studies -- Part I. Knowing Disaster -- 1. The Voyage of the Paragon: Disaster as Method -- 2. Acts of God, Man, and System: Knowledge, Technology, and the Construction of Disaster -- 3. When Does a Crisis Begin? Race, Gender, and the Subprime Noncrisis of the Late 1990s -- Part II. Governing Disaster -- 4. Concrete Kleptocracy and Haiti's Culture of Building: Toward a New Temporality of Disaster -- 5. Risk Technopolitics in Freetown Slums: Why Community- Based Disaster Management Is No Silver Bullet -- 6. Spaces at Risk: Urban Politics and Slum Relocation in Chennai, India -- 7. Plan B: The Collapse of Public- Private Risk Sharing in the US National Flood Insurance Program -- Part III. Imagining Disaster -- 8. Mediating Disaster, or A History of the Novel -- 9. The Tōkai Earthquake and Changing Lexicons of Risk -- 10. Translating Disaster Knowledge from Japan to Chile: A Proposal for Incompleteness -- Afterword -- "Acts of Men": Disasters Neglected, Preventable, and Moral -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- List of Contributors -- Acknowledgments