ABSTRACT

When thinking about the culture and economy of East Asia, many attribute to the region a range of dispositions, including a preference for consensus and social harmony, loyalty and respect towards superiors and government, family values, collectivism, and communitarianism. Affect is central to these concepts, and yet the role of affect and its animated or imagined potentialities in the political economy of East Asia has not been systematically studied. The book examines the affective dimensions of power and economy in East Asia. It illuminates the dynamics of contemporary governance, and ways of overcoming common Western assumptions about East Asian societies. Here, affect is defined as felt quality that gives meaning and imagination to social, political, and economic processes, and as this book demonstrates, it can provide an analytical tool for a nuanced and enriched analysis of social, political, and economic transformations in East Asia.

Through ethnographic and media analyses, this book provides a framework for analyzing emerging phenomena in East Asia, such as happiness promotion, therapeutic governance, the psychologization of social issues, the rise of self-help genres, transnational labor migration, new ideologies of gender and the family, and mass-mediated affective communities. Through the lens of affect theory, the contributors explore changing political configurations, economic engagements, modes of belonging, and forms of subjectivity in East Asia, and use ethnographic research and discourse analysis to illustrate the affective dimensions of state and economic power and the way affect informs and inspires action.

This interdisciplinary book will be of great interest to students and scholars of Asian studies, anthropology, sociology, media studies, history, cultural studies, and gender and women’s studies.

part |28 pages

Introduction

chapter |26 pages

The politics of affect and emotion

Imagination, potentiality and anticipation in East Asia

part |33 pages

Happiness and psychologization

chapter |14 pages

Crafting Confucian remedies for happiness in contemporary China

Unraveling the Yu Dan phenomenon

chapter |18 pages

The happiness of the marginalized

Affect, counseling and self-reflexivity in China

part |33 pages

Body, affect and subjectivity

chapter |17 pages

Banking in affects

The child, a landscape and the performance of a canonical view

chapter |15 pages

Hospitality and detachment

Japanese tour guides' affective labor in Canada

part |37 pages

Tears, media and affective articulation

chapter |17 pages

Tears, capital, ethics

Television and the public sphere in Japan

chapter |19 pages

Melodrama for change

Gender, kuqing xi and the affective articulation of Chinese TV drama

part |39 pages

Gender, affective labor and biopolitical economy

chapter |17 pages

“Affective foreigners save our elder citizens”

Gender, affective labor and biopolitics in Japan

chapter |21 pages

Fulfilling the self and transnational intimacy through emotional labor

The experiences of migrant Filipino domestic workers in South Korea

part |64 pages

Affect, modernity and empires

chapter |21 pages

Affective attachments to Japanese women's language

Language, gender and emotion in colonialism

chapter |21 pages

The politics of haan

Affect and the domestication of anger in South Korea

chapter |21 pages

Familial communism and cartoons

An affective political economy of North Korea