ABSTRACT

This book is an interdisciplinary study of Japan during the socially euphoric years of the Bubble Economy in the 1980s. Shedding light on consumer experiences, this study explores the socio-cultural landscape of Japan, the nation that boasted the second largest economy in the late twentieth century.

Drawing its analysis from various media sources, popular literary works, and public reports, the book articulates how the late 1980s calibrated consumer demands, lifestyles, and perceptions of wealth. Through an examination of the qualitative effects of ‘Bubble money’ on consumers, the book disentangles the anatomy of the festive ambience in the economic phase, closely reading fictional and non-fictional literary works that play the role of reportage, critique, and satire. Through observations of human behaviours in consumption, the book reveals psychosomatic experiences and self-consciousness.

Featuring a wide range of sources from Japanese media and literary works which have yet to be translated for an English audience, this book will be a valuable resource for students and scholars of modern Japanese culture and literature who are interested in the socio-economic landscape of late-twentieth-century Japan.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

The Rhapsody of Kamikaze Capitalism

chapter 1|32 pages

Dreams of the Surplus

The Age of Self-Conscious Consumption

chapter 2|21 pages

You Are What You Buy

Consumer Identities in the Dawn of the Bubble Economy

chapter 3|16 pages

The Age of Festivity

Women's Ambition for Wealth and Consumption of Luxury

chapter 4|17 pages

An Irony of the Bubble Money

Lavish Consumption and Patriarchy in Spleen

chapter 5|15 pages

Affective Values in Consumption

Intimacy with What Money Can(not) Buy

chapter 6|16 pages

Malaise of Economic Euphoria

Bubble Japan in Search of Remedy

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue

Toward the Age of Post-Bubble Consumerism