ABSTRACT

This multidisciplinary book analyses the contradictory coexistence of consumerism and environmentalism in contemporary Japan. It focuses on the dilemma that the diffusion of the concepts of sustainability and recycling has posed for everyday consumption practices, and on how these concepts have affected, and were affected by, the production and consumption of art. Special attention is paid to the changes in consumption practices and environmental consciousness among the Japanese public that have occurred since the 1990s and in the aftermath of the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disasters of March 2011.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Title
Size: 0.33 MB

chapter |18 pages

Post-Bubble Japanese Department Stores

Title
The Need to Search for New Paradigms
Size: 0.33 MB

chapter |20 pages

Consumption of Fast Fashion in Japan

Title
Local Brands and Global Environment
Size: 0.84 MB

chapter |20 pages

Konbini-Nation

Title
The Rise of the Convenience Store in Post-Industrial Japan
Size: 0.37 MB

chapter |18 pages

Serving the Nation

Title
The Myth of Washoku
Size: 1.03 MB
Size: 0.40 MB

chapter |23 pages

The Metamorphosis of Excess

Title
‘Rubbish Houses’ and the Imagined Trajectory of Things in Post-Bubble Japan
Size: 0.41 MB

chapter |21 pages

Robot Reincarnation

Title
Rubbish, Artefacts, and Mortuary Rituals 1
Size: 0.40 MB

chapter |20 pages

Art and Consumption in Post-Bubble Japan

Title
From Postmodern Irony to Shared Engagement
Size: 1.24 MB
Size: 0.39 MB

chapter |22 pages

Consuming Eco-Art

Title
Satoyama at the Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennale 2012
Size: 1.88 MB

chapter |15 pages

Artistic Recycling in Japan Today

Title
A Curator's Perspective
Size: 1.59 MB