Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-18T23:29:26.176Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Studies of Japanese Society and Culture: Sociology and Cognate Disciplines in Hong Kong

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2012

YIN-WAH CHU*
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Hong Kong, Baptist Universityywchu@hkbu.edu.hk; yinw.chu@gmail.com

Abstract

This paper reviews the studies of Japanese society and culture undertaken by Hong Kong-based sociologists and scholars in related disciplines. It presents information on research projects funded by the Research Grants Council, Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI), and Arts and Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) journal articles, authored and edited books, book chapters, non-SSCI and non-A&HCI journal articles, as well as master and doctoral theses written by scholars and graduate students associated with Hong Kong's major universities. It is found that the main topics of research are Japan's capitalist development and corporate growth, meanings and social ramifications of traditional and popular culture, education, gender, and marriage, as well as aspects of work and employment, whereas the major research methods include document analysis, ethnography, and in-depth interviews. The limited amount of research and the preoccupation with economic development and popular culture reflect in part Hong Kong's unique political conditions and the government's indifference to the pursuit of social and political policy analysis. In recent years, the growth of academic exchanges between scholars in Hong Kong, Japan, and other East Asian regions and the heightened emphasis by university administrators on academic research will hopefully bring about advancements in such academic endeavors.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

To include all references listed in the appendices would be prohibitive, therefore only those references referred to in the text are listed below. Readers interested in a complete list of references may contact the author.Google Scholar
Bridges, Brian (2003), ‘The Hong Kong and Japan: Commerce, Culture and Contention’, China Quarterly, 176: 1052–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheung, Sidney C. H. (1996), ‘Change of Ainu Images in Japan: A Reflexive Study of Pre-war and Post-war Photo-images of Ainu’, Visual Anthropology, 9 (1): 124.Google Scholar
Cheung, Sidney C. H. (2000), ‘Men, Women and “Japanese” as Outsiders: A Case Study of Postcards with Ainu Images’, Visual Anthropology, 13 (3): 227–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheung, Sidney C. H. (2003), ‘Ainu Culture in Transition’, Futures, 35 (9): 951–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheung, Sidney C. H. (2008), ‘A Path to World Culture: The Politics of Ainu Heritage in Japan’, in Amoeda, Rogerio, Lira, Sergio, Pinheiro, Cristina, Pinheiro, Filipe, and Pinheiro, Joao (eds.), Heritage 2008: World Heritage and Sustainable Development, Volumes I and II, Barcelos, Portugal: Green Lines Institute for Sustainable Development, pp. 81–9.Google Scholar
CUHK (Chinese University of Hong Kong), Department of Japanese Studies (2010), ‘About us’, http://www5.cuhk.edu.hk/jas/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=96&Itemid=117 (accessed 11 August 2010).Google Scholar
Davison, Robert M., Martinsons, Maris G., Ou, Carol X. J., Murata, Kiyoshi, Drummond, Damon, Li, Yuan, and Lo, Henry W. H. (2009), ‘The Ethics of IT Professionals in Japan and China’, Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 10 (11): 834–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fung, Anthony Y. H. (2007), ‘Intra-Asian Cultural Flow: Cultural Homologies in Hong Kong and Japanese Television Soap Operas’, Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 51 (2): 265–86.Google Scholar
HKCSD (Hong Kong. Census and Statistics Department) (2010), ‘Table 133: Number of Regional Headquarters in Hong Kong by Country/Territory of Location of the Parent Company’, http://www.censtatd.gov.hk/hong_kong_statistics/statistical_tables/index_t.jsp?tableID=133&ID=&subjectID=5 (accessed 21 September 2010).Google Scholar
HKTID (Hong Kong. Trade and Industry Department) (2010), ‘Hong Kong – Japan Trade Relations’, http://www.tid.gov.hk/textonly/english/aboutus/publications/factsheet/japan2009.html (accessed 21 September 2010).Google Scholar
HKU (University of Hong Kong), Department of Japanese Studies (2010), ‘Staff’, http://www.hku.hk/japanese/ (accessed 11 August 2010).Google Scholar
JTM (Japan Tourism Marketing Company) (2011), ‘Statistics of Visitors to Japan from Overseas’, http://www.tourism.jp/english/statistics/inbound.php (accessed 18 January 2011).Google Scholar
Lee, Ho-cheung (2006), ‘Japanese Arts Films in Hong Kong, 1962–2002’, in lee, Pui-tak (ed.), Japanese Culture in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, pp. 95150 (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Lee, Pui-tak (2006), Japanese Culture in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Lee, Wood Hung (1998), ‘Japanese Pop Culture and Hong Kong: A Historical Study of the Japanese Impact on Hong Kong Music after the Second World War’, Studies in Comparative Culture (Tokyo: The Japan Association of Comparative Culture), 38: 8091.Google Scholar
Lee, Wood Hung (1999), ‘The Influence of the Overwhelming Japanese Pop Culture on Hong Kong Society’, in Hara, Takemichi, Chan, Cham-yi, and Wong, Dixon H. W. (eds.), Japan and Chinese Societies in Asia, Hong Kong: The Commercial Press, pp. 237–50 (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Mathews, Gordon (1996a), ‘The Pursuit of a Life Worth Living in Japan and the United States’, Ethnology, 35 (1): 5162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mathews, Gordon (1996b), What Makes Life Worth Living? How Japanese and Americans Make Sense of Their Worlds, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mathews, Gordon (2001), ‘A Collision of Discourses: Japanese and Hong Kong Chinese During the Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands Crisis’, in Befu, Harumi and Guichard-Anguis, Sylvie (eds.), Globalizing Japan, London: Routledge, pp. 153–75.Google Scholar
Mathews, Gordon (2004), ‘Seeking a Career, Finding a Job: How Young People Enter and Resist the Japanese World of Work’, Japan's Changing Generations, edited by Mathews, Gordon and White, Bruce, London: RoutledgeCurzon, pp. 121–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakano, Lynne (2001), ‘Single Japanese Women and Marriage Debates in Popular Culture’, Contemporary Sociological Studies (Gendai Shakaigaku Kenkyû, Hokkaido Shakai Gakkai), 14 (Summer): 203–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakano, Yoshiko (2002), ‘Who Initiates a Global Flow?: Japanese Popular Culture in Asia’, Visual Communication, 1 (2): 229–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakano, Yoshiko (2009), Where There Are Asians, There Are Rice Cookers: How ‘National’ Went Global via Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakano, Yoshiko and Wong, Dixon H. W. (2005), Eating Rice from the Same Pot (Onajikama no Meshi), Tokyo: Heibon-sha (in Japanese).Google Scholar
Ng, Wai-ming (2006), ‘Japanese Popular Culture in Hong Kong: A Preliminary Investigation into its Localization’, in Lee, Pui-tak (ed.), Japanese Culture in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: University of Hong Kong Press, pp. 175–88 (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Ogawa, Masashi (1998), ‘Revival of Ethnic Culture: The Revival Movement of Ainu Traditional Culture’, Hikaku Bunka Kenkyû (Nagasaki), 38: 92101 (in Japanese).Google Scholar
Ogawa, Masashi (1999), ‘Re-creation of Cultural Tradition: Contemporary Ainu Cultural Movement’, in Hara, Takemichi, Chan, Cham-yi, and Wong, Dixon H. W. (eds.), Japan and Chinese Society in Asia, Hong Kong: The Commercial Press, pp. 163–88 (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Ogawa, Masashi (2001), ‘Japanese Popular Music in Hong Kong: Analysis of Global/Local Cultural Relation’, in Befu, Harumi and Guichard-Anguis, Sylvie (eds.), Globalizing Japan, London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Ogawa, Masashi (2004), ‘Japanese Popular Music in Hong Kong: What Does TK Present?’, in Chun, A., Rossiter, N., and Shoesmith, B. (eds.), Refashioning Pop Music in Asia, London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon, pp. 144–56.Google Scholar
Refsing, Kirsten (1996), The Ainu Library: Early European Works on the Ainu Language, Vols. 110, Surrey: Curzon.Google Scholar
Refsing, Kirsten (2000), The Ainu Library: Travelogues and General Descriptions, Vols. 15, Surrey: Curzon.Google Scholar
Refsing, Kirsten (2003), ‘In Japan but not of Japan’, in Mackerras, C. (ed.), Ethnicity in Asia, London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon, pp. 4863.Google Scholar
Refsing, Kirsten, Nakano, Yoshiko, and Wong, Dixon H. W. (2003), Selling Japan in Hong Kong: William Mong and the National Brand, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press (in Chinese).Google Scholar
So, Alvin Y. and Chiu, Stephen W. K. (1996), ‘Modern East Asia in World Systems Analysis’, Sociological Inquiry, 66 (4): 471–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
UGC (University Grants Committee) (2010), ‘General Research Fund: Funded Projects’, http://www.ugc.edu.hk/eng/rgc/grf/fund/fund.htm (accessed 18 September 2010).Google Scholar
Wong, Dixon H. W. (1997), ‘Japanese Women Employees of a Japanese Supermarket in Hong Kong’, in Nakamaki, H. and Hioki, K. (eds.), Toward an Anthropology of Administration, Osaka: Toohoo Shuppan, pp. 239–56 (in Japanese).Google Scholar
Wong, Dixon H. W. (1999), Japanese Bosses, Chinese Workers: Power and Control in a Hong Kong Megastore, London: Curzon & Hawaii: The University of Hawaii Press.Google Scholar
Wong, Dixon H. W. (2001), ‘Japanese Business Women of Yaohan Hong Kong: Toward a Diversified Globalization of Japanese Ethnoscape’, in Befu, Harumi and Guichard-Anguis, Sylvie (eds.), Globalizing Japan, London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Wong, Dixon H. W. (2006), ‘The Rise of Yaohan and Hong Kong's Social Change’, in Lee, Pui-Tak (ed.), Japanese Culture in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, pp. 151–73 (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Yau, Shuk-ting Kinnia (2003), ‘Japanese Elements in Shaw Movies’, in Gene-fon, Liao, Pak-tong, Cheuk, Po-shek, Fu and Sai-shing, Yung (eds.), Shaw's Film and Television Empire: The Imagination of a Cultural China, Taipei: Rye Field Publishing, pp. 76112 (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Yau, Shuk-ting Kinnia (2005), ‘Interactions between Japanese and Hong Kong Action Cinemas’, in Morris, Meaghan, Li, Siu Leung, and Ching-Kiu, Stephen Chan (eds.), Hong Kong Connections – Transnational Imagination in Action Cinema, Durham and London: Duke University Press; Hong Kong: The Hong Kong University Press, pp. 3548.Google Scholar
Yau, Shuk-ting Kinnia (2007), Interrelation between Japanese and Hong Kong Film Industries: Investigation of the Roots of the Asian Film Networks, Tokyo: The University of Tokyo Press (in Japanese).Google Scholar
Yau, Shuk-ting Kinnia (2008a), ‘Japan–Hong Kong Cinematic Collaborations of the Post 1970s’, in Mito, Takamichi, Chi-ming, Ho, and Miyazoe Wong, Yuko (eds.), Japanese Studies in the Asia-Pacific Region, Hong Kong: Society of Japanese Language Education Hong Kong, pp. 115–23 (in Japanese).Google Scholar
Yau, Shuk-ting Kinnia (2008b), ‘Imagining Others: A Study of the “Asia” Presented in Japanese Cinema’, in Nault, Derrick M. (ed.), Development in Asia: Interdisciplinary, Post-Neoliberal, and Transnational Perspectives, Florida: Brown Walker Press, pp. 135–63.Google Scholar
Yau, Shuk-ting Kinnia (2009a), ‘From Godzilla to Train Man: A Study of the Japanese Self Image in the Context of the West’, Asian Profile (Canada: Asian Research Service), 37 (1/February): 1726.Google Scholar
Yau, Shuk-ting Kinnia (2009b), Japanese and Hong Kong Film Industries: Understanding the Origins of East Asian Film Networks, London and New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yau, Shuk-ting Kinnia (2010a), Chinese–Japanese–Korean Cinemas: History, Society and Culture, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Yau, Shuk-ting Kinnia (2010b), ‘Male Chauvinism in the Worlds of Miyazaki and Disney’, Asian Profile (Canada: Asian Research Service), 38 (1/February): 4351.Google Scholar
Yeh, Yueh-Yu and Davis, Darrell William (2002), ‘Japan Hongscreen: Pan-Asian Cinemas and Flexible Accumulation’, Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television, 22 (1): 6182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar