ABSTRACT

The natural and man-made cataclysmic events of the 11 March 2011 disaster, or 3.11, have dramatically altered the status quo of contemporary Japanese society. While much has been written about the social, political, economic, and technical aspects of the disaster, this volume represents one of the first in-depth explorations of the cultural responses to the devastating tsunami, and in particular the ongoing nuclear disaster of Fukushima.

This book explores a wide range of cultural responses to the Fukushima nuclear calamity by analyzing examples from literature, poetry, manga, theatre, art photography, documentary and fiction film, and popular music. Individual chapters examine the changing positionality of post-3.11 northeastern Japan and the fear-driven conflation of time and space in near-but-far urban centers; explore the political subversion and nostalgia surrounding the Fukushima disaster; expose the ambiguous effects of highly gendered representations of fear of nuclear threat; analyze the musical and poetic responses to disaster; and explore the political potentialities of theatrical performances. By scrutinizing various media narratives and taking into account national and local perspectives, the book sheds light on cultural texts of power, politics, and space.

Providing an insight into the post-disaster Zeitgeist as expressed through a variety of media genres, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of Japanese Studies, Japanese Culture, Popular Culture, and Literature Studies.

chapter 1|20 pages

Negotiating nuclear disaster

An introduction

chapter 2|18 pages

Literature maps disaster

The contending narratives of 3.11 fiction

chapter 3|19 pages

Summertime Blues

Musical critique in the aftermaths of Japan's ‘dark spring’

chapter 5|16 pages

Uncanny anxiety

Literature after Fukushima

chapter 6|20 pages

Problematizing life

Documentary films on the 3.11 nuclear catastrophe

chapter 7|17 pages

Gendering ‘Fukushima'

Resistance, self-responsibility, and female hysteria in Sono Sion's Land of Hope

chapter 8|17 pages

Antigone in Japan

Some responses to 3.11 at Festival/Tokyo 2012

chapter 9|18 pages

Poetry in an era of nuclear power

Three poetic responses to Fukushima

chapter 10|15 pages

Challenging reality with fiction

Imagining alternative readings of Japanese society in post-Fukushima theater

chapter 11|22 pages

Oishinbo's Fukushima elegy

Grasping for the truth about radioactivity in a food manga

chapter 12|22 pages

The politics of the senses

Takayama Akira's atomized theatre after Fukushima