ABSTRACT

Over the past thirty years, whilst Japan has produced a diverse set of youth cultures which have had a major impact on popular culture across the globe, it has also developed a succession of youth problems which have led to major concerns within the country itself. Drawing on detailed empirical fieldwork, the authors of this volume set these issues in a clearly articulated ‘social constructionist’ framework, and put forth a sociology of Japanese youth problems which argues that there is a certain predictability about the way in which these problems are discovered, defined and dealt with.

The chapters include case studies covering issues such as:

Returnee children (kikokushijo)

Compensated dating (enjo kōsai)

Corporal punishment (taibatsu)

Bullying (ijime)

Child abuse (jidō gyakutai)

The withdrawn youth (hikikomori) and

NEETs (not in education, employment or training)

By examining these various social problems collectively, A Sociology of Japanese Youth explains why particular youth problems appeared when they did and what lessons they can provide for the study of youth problems in other societies.

This book will be of huge interest to students and scholars of Japanese society and culture, the sociology of Japan, Japanese anthropology and the comparative sociology of youth studies.

chapter 2|24 pages

From Pitiful to Privileged?

The fifty-year story of the changing perception and status of Japan's returnee children (kikokushijo)

chapter 3|27 pages

Narratives and Statistics

How compensated dating (enjo kōsai) was sold

chapter 4|17 pages

Taibatsu

From educational solution to social problem to marginalized non-issue

chapter 6|17 pages

Hikikomori

How private isolation caught the public eye

chapter 7|20 pages

NEETs

The strategy within the category

chapter 8|15 pages

Shifting Landscapes

The social context of youth problems in an ageing nation