Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Preface to the Third Edition
- Map of Japan
- 1 The Japan Phenomenon and the Social Sciences
- 2 Class and Stratification: An Overview
- 3 Geographical and Generational Variations
- 4 Forms of Work in Cultural Capitalism
- 5 Diversity and Unity in Education
- 6 Gender Stratification and the Family System
- 7 ‘Japaneseness’, Ethnicity, and Minority Groups
- 8 Collusion and Competition in the Establishment
- 9 Popular Culture and Everyday Life
- 10 Civil Society and Friendly Authoritarianism
- References
- Index
2 - Class and Stratification: An Overview
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Preface to the Third Edition
- Map of Japan
- 1 The Japan Phenomenon and the Social Sciences
- 2 Class and Stratification: An Overview
- 3 Geographical and Generational Variations
- 4 Forms of Work in Cultural Capitalism
- 5 Diversity and Unity in Education
- 6 Gender Stratification and the Family System
- 7 ‘Japaneseness’, Ethnicity, and Minority Groups
- 8 Collusion and Competition in the Establishment
- 9 Popular Culture and Everyday Life
- 10 Civil Society and Friendly Authoritarianism
- References
- Index
Summary
The public discourse on class and stratification in Japan experienced a dramatic paradigm shift towards the end of the twentieth century. While widely portrayed as an egalitarian and predominantly middle class society during the period of high economic growth until the early 1990s, Japan has suddenly been deemed a society divided along class lines under the prolonged stagnation that has characterized the Japanese economy for a couple of decades.
In the heyday of the ‘Japanese miracle’, the spectacular comeback of Japan's economy after the devastation of World War II, a considerable amount of literature suggested that the basic rifts in Japan were not those between social classes but between corporate groups. It was argued that in Japan ‘it is not really a matter of workers struggling against capitalists or managers but of Company A ranged against Company B’. Some went so far as to claim that the Western notions of class and stratification did not find expression in the daily realities of the Japanese. Others contended that class-consciousness was weaker in Japan than in Western countries. Often-publicized government statistics which showed that some 90 percent of Japanese regarded themselves as belonging to the ‘middle class’ appeared to bear out this line of thinking.
However, with the economic recession in the 1990s and the 2000s, the public perception has shifted to emphasize the advent of ‘disparity society’ with marked divisions between classes with rival interests.
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- Information
- An Introduction to Japanese Society , pp. 37 - 60Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010