ABSTRACT

This book explores “self-searching migrants,” a new group of indefinitely globally mobile people whose purpose of overseas stay is the search of true self and the work they really want to do, using Japanese trans-Pacific sojourners as the case study.

Utilizing testimonies collected from interviews with Japanese migrants in their twenties to forties who had entered the job market between the early 1990s and 2010 and left for the English-speaking countries of Canada, Australia, and Singapore, the book argues that their practices are both ubiquitous and unique, the products of global and local contexts of a specific time. As semiskilled migrants from an extra-Western, postindustrial country, their struggles show a different picture of the West-centric world power system from those experienced by migrant workers from the Global South.

Including extensive qualitative research and interview material collected over a 20-year period, this book will be of huge interest to students and scholars of Japanese culture and society, cultural anthropology, and migration.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part I|72 pages

What is self-searching migration? A postmodern phenomenon

chapter 1|22 pages

What is meant by self-searching?

chapter 2|22 pages

Self-work identification

chapter 3|26 pages

Self-searching migration in late modernity

part II|67 pages

Who are self-searching migrants? Japanese self-searching sojourners in Canada and Australia

chapter 4|23 pages

True self, true work

The background stories

chapter 5|21 pages

Blurring boundaries

Youth and adulthood, work and holiday, sojourning and immigrating

part III|37 pages

Post-self-searching in the Pacific East?

chapter 7|28 pages

“Asian” and “mobile worker”

New forms of identification in Singapore

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

Self-searching within domestic and global power imbalances