ABSTRACT

Disasters of the 21st century differ substantially from other kinds of hazards that previous societies have had to cope with because of the twin forces of globalization and the communications revolution. But what makes today’s disasters—industrial, technological, environmental, and socio-cultural—so different in scope and impact? What are the possible disasters of the future? And how can we, as collective humanity, best manage and respond to the globalization of disasters?

The Consequences of Global Disasters makes a distinctive contribution to the ever-expanding field of disaster research by developing a multi-contextual, multi-disciplinary and multi-methodological approach to the social analysis of disasters. Anthony Elliott and Eric L. Hsu have brought together a highly distinguished group of international contributors to focus on how people react to the unsettling effects of disasters, which come in a multitude of forms. Numerous contributors concentrate on the cultural, political and psychological ramifications of the 2011 Great East Japan earthquake and tsunami, but disasters in other contexts, such as Australia, China and Haiti, are considered as well. 

By offering unique empirical, methodological and theoretical insights, The Consequences of Global Disasters sets an agenda for future developments in the field of disaster research and will be a key resource for students and scholars working in social science disciplines such as sociology, cultural studies, international relations, psycho-social studies, social work, Japanese studies and social theory.

part |94 pages

Expanding forms of disaster research

chapter |15 pages

‘Flowers will bloom'

How Japanese people mentally cope with the massive loss caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake

chapter |16 pages

Death and disaster

The catastrophe of suicide in Japan

chapter |14 pages

Sociology of Japanese literature after the Great East Japan Earthquake

Analysing the disaster's underrepresented impacts

chapter |16 pages

From ‘This is not a pipe' to ‘This is not Fukushima'

Global disaster and visual communication

part |72 pages

Disasters and social division

chapter |13 pages

New emotion, action and recognition of migrants and mediators after the Great East Japan Earthquake

Toward a new sociological theoretical approach to multicultural situations in Japan

chapter |12 pages

Ganbarō Nippon

Human insecurity, resilience and national identity after 3.11 1

chapter |14 pages

From makeshift tents to apartment units

Women rebuilding life in post-disaster Sichuan

chapter |12 pages

The ‘face' of earthquake disaster reporting

Inspecting Kahoku Shimpo's sources of information

part |67 pages

Social theory and the psycho-social dimensions of disasters

chapter |13 pages

To dwell in ambivalence

On the promise and dilemmas of Beck's ‘The Art of Doubt’

chapter |13 pages

Japanese society after great earthquakes

From the viewpoint of the counter-relation between ‘the social' and ‘the psychic’

chapter |12 pages

Rising anxieties and the longing for ties

On the transformation of relationships and self in Japan