Japanese Review of Cultural Anthropology
Online ISSN : 2424-0494
Print ISSN : 2432-5112
ISSN-L : 2432-5112
24 巻, 2 号
選択された号の論文の15件中1~15を表示しています
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Research Note
  • Possibilities and Challenges of Analysis through Step-by-step Visual Information Sharing
    Tomoko Oto, Naoya Tojo
    2024 年24 巻2 号 p. 9-36
    発行日: 2024年
    公開日: 2025/11/10
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス

    The COVID-19 pandemic has created a crisis in conducting conventional cultural anthropological research. However, it has also provided an opportunity to consider conducting research when anthropologists are not present on the field. This study examines the potential of remote ethnography, with the use of photography, through an experiment, wherein visual data from the field are shared progressively between two members. In this approach, fieldworkers separate the visual information in the photographs from the contextual information, and share the photographs with other researchers step-by-step. This approach created scope for "overinterpretation." Overinterpretations generated by researchers who did not conduct fieldwork may provide new insights and suggestions for those who conducted fieldwork.

  • Figures of Response-ability in the Rokugodote Homeless Village
    Ahmet Melik Baş
    2024 年24 巻2 号 p. 37-81
    発行日: 2024年
    公開日: 2025/11/10
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス

    This article explores the concept of tropism as a material-semiotic tool for comprehending complex entanglements among humans and non-humans within a homeless village located along Japan’s Tama River. Tropism, originally a biological term, is reimagined as a figurative lens, illuminating the notion of a response-ability that transcends human-centric interactions and embraces the interconnections of diverse entities and environments. The article navigates a range of phenomena in the village, from resource utilization to informal waste management, structural violence, and collaborative initiatives, to name a few, all through the tropismatic (dis)entanglement framework. The analyses showcase how tropism provide a non-hierarchical perspective, facilitating a bridge between disparate worldings and promoting a diffractive approach to interactions with both human and non-human elements. This method not only fosters nuanced understandings of intricate relationships but also encourages scholars to embrace rich tapestries of human-nonhuman relationships across diverse contexts, transcending the boundaries of the homeless village.

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