Historicka Sociologie (Nov 2021)

Amorphization amid Fragmentation: Japanese Society 1990–2020

  • Yoshio Sugimoto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14712/23363525.2021.15
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
pp. 17 – 30

Abstract

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This paper sketches the major sociological transformations of Japanese society of the last three decades, 1990–2020, which can be regarded as a crucial turning point in Japan’s history. It first examines the marked paradigm changes that have occurred in Japanese studies. The paper then endeavours to unravel how such alterations reflect the structural changes caused by the penetration of neoliberalism, the decline of the manufacturing industry, and the expansion of cultural capitalism. After illustrating how these forces have fragmented social relations, the paper ends with a description of how Japanese society is becoming increasingly amorphous in its social structures and value orientations. The paper attempts to cast the shifts of these three decades into relief against the background of the previous three decades, 1960–1989, when Japan enjoyed spectacular economic growth.