Geographical Review of Japan
Online ISSN : 2185-1727
Print ISSN : 1347-9555
ISSN-L : 1347-9555
Volume 78, Issue 1
Displaying 1-4 of 4 articles from this issue
  • Masato MORI
    2005 Volume 78 Issue 1 Pages 1-27
    Published: January 01, 2005
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    After a cultural turn, many cultural theorists, including geographers, examine the problems of representation and power. In studies of exhibitions, geographers note the ways in which boundaries are represented using special materials and their arrangement. The messages thus encoded are not perceived directly by the audience but are decoded differently based on the positionality of the individual.
    In this paper, the author attempts to explain how the patron saint of the Shingon-shu Buddhist sect, Kobo-Daishi (also known as Kukai), was articulated with Japanese culture through exhibitions and represented as a national hero. The concept of articulation as developed in cultural studies is used to analyze the exhibitions presented in 1934. Because those exhibitions were both organized and reported by the mass media, the concept of a “media event” is also borrowed from media studies.
    Because the then Japanese government had oppressed Buddhism as a seditious religion, the memorial event (goonki) for Kobo-Daishi in 1884 was not very successful. The Shingon-shu sect therefore made elaborate preparations for the subsequent goonki scheduled for 1934 and undertook several projects. The most significant goonki project was a historical study of Kobo-Daishi to place him within the context of Japanese culture. In the 1920s and 1930s in Japan, a new bourgeoisie appeared in urban areas, along with “modern culture, ” e. g., department stores, mass-market magazines, the custom of window shopping, etc. After the Japanese invasion of China, Japan increasingly embraced fascism and most major organizations supported it. The Asahi News based in Osaka also concurred with national policies.
    The Asahi News presented Kobo-Daishi as a symbol of Japanese culture and, in cooperation with the Shingon-shu sect, established an association called the Kobo-Daishi Bunka Sen'yokai to publicize his contributions to Japanese history, spirit, and culture. The highest-ranking officers in this association were all employed by the Asahi News. The main project of the association was arranging exhibitions showing the relationship between Kobo-Daishi and Japanese culture. The exhibits were selected mainly from among cultural property classified and certified by the Imperial Household Agency in 1888. Therefore the exhibits emphasized imperialism while showing the connection between Kobo-Daishi and the national ideology.
    The Kobo-Daishi Bunka Sen'yokai held exhibitions entitled Kobo-Daishi Bunka Tenrankai in four locations; one was at the Asahi Building and the others were in department stores. On one hand, the Asahi Building was regarded as an edifice of contemporary Japanese culture; on the other, department stores were locations visited for pleasure by urban dwellers starting in the late 1920s. It can be assumed, therefore, that these two types of location were an attempt to attract a mass audience.
    The different exhibition sites involved different methods of display. At the Asahi Building, cultural features associated with empire were emphasized with the cultural contributions of Kobo-Daishi on the periphery. This arrangement reflected the relationship of Kobo-Daishi to the national ideology. However, in the department stores this concept had to be easy for a mass audience to understand, and therefore panoramic exhibit technology, which was popularized in Japan by department stores, was adopted. Because such panoramic exhibits depend on the specificity of place, the territoriality of the nation-state was reinforced. The viewers were not simply subjects under the national ideology, however, but individuals who could circumvent the intentions of the exhibitions by decoding their meanings. In that periods, numerous treasures from temples were displayed at department stores and it was possible for the mass audience to regard them as objects of amusement.
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  • Atsushi TAIRA
    2005 Volume 78 Issue 1 Pages 28-47
    Published: January 01, 2005
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    This paper critically reviews geographic studies of multinational corporations and presents a future research agenda. Studies on multinational corporations appeared in the fields of economics and business administration much earlier than in geography. Since the 1980s, however, the number of geographic studies has increased rapidly.
    The focus of these studies has expanded from the location patterns of multinational corporations and spatial characteristics of foreign direct investment to intra- and interfirm linkages, relations between foreign direct investment and the regional economy, transfer of management methods and technology of multinational corporations to local areas, and power structures between multinational companies and state and local governments. Also, although studies on multinational corporations in the manufacturing sector have dominated the research in sheer numbers, studies focusing on the multinationals in the service sector, which have been expanding their businesses in many areas in the world, are now increasing. Most previous studies were conducted at the nation-state scale, but recently, the number of studies at the local scale has also been rising, stimulated by researchers' increasing attention to locality, which embeds multinational corporations in a place.
    From now, it is necessary to develop studies based on the viewpoints referred above and also to accumulate “firm”-based studies such as those dealing with the corporate culture of multinationals and its transformation.
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  • A Case Study of Residents of the Silver Peer Housing Facilities in Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo, Japan
    Ritsuko NISHI
    2005 Volume 78 Issue 1 Pages 48-63
    Published: January 01, 2005
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The present paper examines the residential continuity of people aging within an urban environment. It considers the housing policy in a facility for single elderly people in Bunkyo Ward, known as the Silver Peer Housing Project. The Silver Peer Housing Project targets low-income single elderly people who cannot afford privately owned housing.
    The paper deals with two main related issues. The first one refers to disabilities associated with old age. The second considers the constraints of the physical and social environment of Bunkyo Ward and their effect on Silver Peer residents. The research is based on interviews with 17 occupants of three Silver Peer housing facilities in Bunkyo Ward.
    Our investigation clarified the following:
    1. Bunkyo Ward has built up over time various urban amenities and social infrastructure that support residential continuity. However, with disabilities due to aging, some of the residents cannot enjoy the convenience of such urban amenities.
    2. Mainly due to geographical (environmental) constraints like slopes, residents with severe physical disabilities find their mobility limited.
    3. The interpersonal relationships of the residents are not intimate, and neither are their relations with the local community. The residents do not have neighbors to rely on for support. As a consequence, they have to rely on “life support members, ” persons who extend aid in case of emergency. Recently, however, the role of life support members has been forced to expand, due to aging and associated disabilities of the residents.
    4. Disabled residents increasingly need continual support in their daily lives and must rely on outside help. However, the Nursing Insurance System puts very strict limitations on the types of service they are eligible for. The services that the residents need most are surveillance, including attendance when going out, and such services are not covered by the Nursing Insurance System. As a result, the residents must cover individually the burdening costs of such services.
    In the midst of a financial crisis, the Silver Peer Housing Project cannot be expected to expand. Further research is needed as the basis of effective policy steps to support residential continuity.
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  • 2005 Volume 78 Issue 1 Pages 64-68,i
    Published: January 01, 2005
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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