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Discounted life: Social time in relationless Japan
Abstract
<jats:p>The essay takes on recent news stories of “missing elderly” (elderly whose
deaths go unrecorded) and “lonely death” (bodies discovered days or weeks after someone
has died all alone) to consider how life, death, and the bonds/debts of social relationality
are getting recalibrated in postcrisis Japan. In what has become a trend toward singular
living and solitary existence—sometimes called Japan's “relationless society” (muen
shakai)—those without human or economic capital are put at risk. The precarity of
living/dying without a safety net of others is one sociological fact examined in this
essay. But I also consider another: the emergence of new practices for postmortem
care/memorial that relieve social intimates (notably family) of the responsibilities
of tending to the dead. In an era where privatization and “self-responsibility” now
extend to death, how does sociality get played out in an everyday limited to the present?</jats:p>
Type
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25979Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1215/01903659-2919540Publication Info
Allison, A (2015). Discounted life: Social time in relationless Japan. Boundary 2, 42(3). pp. 129-141. 10.1215/01903659-2919540. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25979.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Anne Allison
Professor of Cultural Anthropology
Anne Allison is a cultural anthropologist who researches the intersection between
political economy, everyday life, and the imagination in the context of late capitalist,
post-industrial Japan. Her work spans the subjects of sexuality, pornography, and
maternal labor to the globalization of Japanese youth products and the precarity of
irregular workers. She is the author of Nightwork: Sexuality, Pleasure, and Corporate
Masculinity in a Tokyo Hostess Club (University of Chicago Press, 1994—an et

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