ABSTRACT

Brian J. McVeigh uses a unique anthropological approach to step outside flawed stereotypes of Japanese society and really engage in the current debate over the role of bureaucracy in Japanese politics.
To many in the West, Japan appears as a paradox: a rational, high-tech economic superpower and yet at the same time a deeply ritualistic and ceremonial society. This adventurous new study demonstrates how these nominally conflicting impressions of Japan can be reconciled and a greater understanding of the state achieved.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

Where rationality and rituality meet

chapter 2|29 pages

Demystifying a discourse

The misuses of “Japanese culture” and the production of rationality

chapter 3|26 pages

The bureaucratized self

Public, private, and “civil society” in Japan 1

chapter 4|31 pages

Japan's government

The bureaucratic blurring of state and society

chapter 6|35 pages

Japan's Ministry of Education

Rationalized Schooling and the State

chapter 7|21 pages

The rationality of moral education

The state's vision of civil society

chapter 8|20 pages

Conclusion

Lessons from Japan about state and society