The Annual Review of Sociology
Online ISSN : 1884-0086
Print ISSN : 0919-4363
ISSN-L : 0919-4363
Volume 2023, Issue 36
Displaying 1-12 of 12 articles from this issue
Special Issue
Articles
  • Minato Suzuki
    2023Volume 2023Issue 36 Pages 52-63
    Published: August 22, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: September 05, 2024
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    Using the methodology of conversation analysis, the aim of this study is to explore how the social conditions appropriate to the activity of performing on stages are constructed and how actors’ participation as “actors” is shaped in the creative process of contemporary Japanese theater. Previous sociological studies of contemporary theater have not attempted a detailed analysis of the interactions during the creative development of a play. However, this process is a central part of the theatrical production process. Analyzing interactions during rehearsals, it is revealed that the director’s embodied gaze is mobilized as an interactive resource to initiate actors’ performances during the creative process.

    Download PDF (622K)
  • Makoto Takahashi
    2023Volume 2023Issue 36 Pages 64-75
    Published: August 22, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: September 05, 2024
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    The Scottish independence referendum in 2014 has been widely studied. However, studies exploring how the Scottish Government, led by the Scottish National Party, legitimatised Scottish independence are relatively scarce. Building on a concept, “nationalism-social policy nexus”, developed by Daniel Béland and André Lecours, and analysis of a government white paper Scotland’s Future as well as speeches by the First Minister and Deputy First Minister, the way in which the Scottish Government legitimatised Scottish independence by criticising the “bedroom tax”, which was introduced by the Conservative-Liberal Democratic coalition government in April 2013, is demonstrated.

    Download PDF (385K)
  • Takahito Niikura
    2023Volume 2023Issue 36 Pages 76-87
    Published: August 22, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: September 05, 2024
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    In wartime Japan, large numbers of national standards were established in order to regulate everyday life; a national uniform (Kokumin-Fuku),national housing (Kokumin-Jutaku),and national food (Kokumin-Shoku).This paper scrutinizes the relationship between these regulations and industrial technologies resulting from mass production. How the wartime Japanese state subsumed individual life through measurement and quantification in light of the standardization and nationalization of everyday life is described in this paper. Furthermore, how individuals were forced to govern their lives to fit those standards is also explored.

    Download PDF (451K)
  • Kentaro Seto
    2023Volume 2023Issue 36 Pages 88-99
    Published: August 22, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: September 05, 2024
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    This paper aims to clarify the effect of service industrialization on “quality of work” through an examination of the impact of the ratio of atypical employment by industry on jobs and wages by gender. Prior literatures say the service industry has two characteristics. One is that they depend on women and atypical workers, and the other is that the “quality of work” tends to be low. However, it is conceivable that the effect of the service industry on “job quality” may differ by gender. In this paper, employing PIAAC in 2011 in Japan, I revealed two things. First, the increase in the ratio of atypical employment has led to a greater allocation of jobs to women in typical employment. Second, it has led to a reduction in wages for both men and women in typical employment. From the above, women in typical employment have borne a double burden of additional job duties and lower wages during the development of the service sector.

    Download PDF (446K)
  • Akihito Kato
    2023Volume 2023Issue 36 Pages 100-111
    Published: August 22, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: September 05, 2024
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    The purpose of this paper is a theoretical examination of materialism in disability studies. Materialism is an important theoretical starting point for disability studies. Therefore, materialism in disability studies was seen as the source of disability studies’ imagination to grasp disability as social oppression and the cause of disability studies’ dismissal of difference. After reviewing the materialist assumptions of disability studies, this paper examines the critique of the materialist assumptions of disability studies and the response to the critique of poststructuralism by materialist disability studies. The theoretical foundations that open the critical imagination of a new disability politics are explored through this work.

    Download PDF (374K)
feedback
Top