Cool governance: Japan's ubiquitous society, surveillance, and creative industries

被引:1
|
作者
Choo, Kukhee [1 ]
机构
[1] Sophia Univ, Fac Liberal Arts, Tokyo, Japan
关键词
D O I
10.1080/14735784.2018.1424005
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
The rapid reform of the Akihabara district of Tokyo during the first decade of the twenty-first century, in conjunction with the Japanese government's policy on the global promotion of Cool Japan, has been envisioned under the Japanese government's new direction of becoming a 'ubiquitous society'. From the postwar period when Akihabara became the techno-gadgetry hub of Tokyo, into the twenty-first century where it transforms itself into the Mecca of anime and video games, Akihabara has become the embodiment of national hope and technological future. Noticeably, what also implemented alongside this advance of techno-future is a new form of governance and surveillance. After Kato Tomohiro's murderous rampage in Akihabara in 2008, numerous CCTVs have been installed to secure the neighbourhood from crime and news of this solution became a spectacle in international media. This form of ubiquitous techno-governance integrated as part of everyday life had already been imagined in anime such as Denno Koiru (Coil A Circle of Children), which broadcast on Japan's national broadcast station NHK in 2007. In light of the concerted effort of the Japanese government's promotion of anime to the global consumers seamlessly integrating the urban developmental project of Akihabara, the production of Denno Koiru at that historical juncture presents a pertinent foreshadowing of Japan's 'society of control'. This article will examine the notion of ubiquitous society and surveillance in Denno Koiru and situate its production against the backdrop of Japan's growing techno-governance vis-a-vis its creative industries in the twenty-first century.
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页码:94 / 118
页数:25
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