Japan's Outcaste Youth by June A. Gordon
Author:June A. Gordon [Gordon, June A.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781594515620
Barnesnoble:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2008-12-30T00:00:00+00:00
1. Executive Committee for Comprehensive Planning of Buraku Liberation in the Asaka Area, 1995.
2. Nabeshima, 2007.
3. Executive Committee for Comprehensive Planning of Buraku Liberation in the Asaka Area, 1995.
4. IMADR, 2001.
5. Nabeshima, 2007.
Chapter Seven
Invisible and Silent: The Burakumin of Kanto
EAST/WEST DIVIDE
While it is true that a discussion of the Burakumin is stigmatized throughout Japan, for those Burakumin who live in eastern Japan (the Kanto area), their existence is almost completely denied. Having conducted research in Osaka (Kansai) for three years prior to expanding my work on marginalized youth to the Tokyo area, I was clearly aware of the existence of Burakumin in Kanto but I was also alerted to the fact that finding people who would talk openly about their existence would be difficult. Part of the reason for this silence is due to the destruction of many intact Buraku communities during the war, causing dislocation and mass migration from the countryside. Alongside this geographic rupture came the political decision on the part of the JCP (Japanese Communist Party), who held power in the Kanto area after the war, to refuse to allow certain areas with high concentration of Burakumin to be designated as official Buraku or âDowa.â The JCP believed that absence of community demarcations would allow for greater fluidity and ease of assimilation into the larger society. While in theory this appears valid, numerous are the stories of Kanto Burakumin who live in fear of their identity being disclosed.
The performance of passing in a society where oneâs identity has to be investigated to ensure âpurity,â since there is no visible or linguistic difference to indicate otherwise, takes its toll, even on those who are not Burakumin but have association with the community. One prosperous Okinawan resident in the Kanto region whom I met is living in fear of disclosure as Burakumin, even by his housemaid. The desirability to pass in a society in which meeting the group norm is paramount cannot be faulted and is clearly one of the main reasons for the movement of Burakumin, particularly those who have gained economically from government compensation, out of the mura (village) and into greater Tokyo. However, not having a group identity or solidarity with people with whom they can openly be themselves can create a consciousness of unease and discomfort with those one suspects might judge them negatively. Kanto Burakumin are also disadvantaged in that they did not benefit from the forty years of financial, educational, and social support provided by the Special Measures Legislation since it could only be applied to designated Buraku communities. It is estimated that there are approximately 1,000 such areas throughout the country.
But another significant factor that separates Kanto from Kansai is the lack of systematic education in Kanto schools about the historical conditions that have placed the Burakumin in a vulnerable and disadvantageous position. Dowa Kyoiku, which has been incorporated with the educational curriculum in the Kansai/Osaka region for decades, is either given short shrift in the Tokyo area or holds a negative image in the minds of those exposed to it.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Adding Value to Policy Analysis and Advice by Claudia Scott; Karen Baehler(456)
Sociological Perspectives of Health and Illness by Constantinos N. Phellas(444)
Race and American Political Development by unknow(441)
Human and Global Security : An Exploration of Terms by Peter Stoett(425)
American Government and Politics Today by Steffen W. Schmidt Mack C. Shelley Barbara A. Bardes(424)
Control Of Oil - Hardback by Kayal(407)
Entrepreneurship Education and Training: The Issue of Effectiveness by Colette Henry Frances Hill Claire Leitch(365)
The Catholic Church and European State Formation, AD 1000-1500 by Jørgen Møller(355)
Materializing the Middle Passage by Jane Webster;(349)
The World According to China by Elizabeth C. Economy(343)
Left Is Not Woke by Susan Neiman(328)
Turkey's Relations with the West and the Turkic Republics: The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Model by Idris Bal(313)
Theories of Counseling and Psychotherapy: A Case Approach by Nancy L. Murdock(313)
Cross-Cultural Child Development for Social Workers by Lena Robinson(306)
Japan's Ainu Minority in Tokyo by Mark K. Watson(297)
Advances in Child Development and Behavior, Volume 37 by Patricia J. Bauer(295)
Laboratory Life by Bruno Latour(294)
Beyond Service: State Workers, Public Policy, and the Prospects for Democratic Administration by Greg McElligott(284)
The Oxford Handbook of Museum Archaeology by Stevenson Alice;(275)
