2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.emospa.2021.100765
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Miracle boats and other wonders: Locating affect in the narratives of recovery and removal of Japanese post-disaster debris

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Rituals and commemorative events provide ways for survivors to express grief and reflect on their loss. Indeed, studies of other post‐tsunami contexts, such as in India, Japan, and Sri Lanka, reveal how personal and public acts and objects of memorialisation become intwined with people's efforts to remake their everyday lives (Samuels, 2016; Martini and Gasparri, 2021). Disaster healing, however, can be slow, even intergenerational, with visits to disaster areas or memorial sites being important components of this process (Mika and Kelman, 2020).…”
Section: Understanding Disaster Mobilities Temporalities and Recoverymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rituals and commemorative events provide ways for survivors to express grief and reflect on their loss. Indeed, studies of other post‐tsunami contexts, such as in India, Japan, and Sri Lanka, reveal how personal and public acts and objects of memorialisation become intwined with people's efforts to remake their everyday lives (Samuels, 2016; Martini and Gasparri, 2021). Disaster healing, however, can be slow, even intergenerational, with visits to disaster areas or memorial sites being important components of this process (Mika and Kelman, 2020).…”
Section: Understanding Disaster Mobilities Temporalities and Recoverymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the Miyagi Prefecture Fishery Union's ( kumiai ) 2009-2015 report (MPG 2018), oyster tonnage plummeted from overproduction in 2009 and 2010 (4300 and 3120 tons respectively) to a mere fraction in 2011 (320 tons). With the main sea farming sites—the shallow bays of the rias coast of northern Miyagi—engulfed in debris (Martini and Gasparri 2018) and the coastal infrastructure (workshops, forklifts, boats) destroyed, a significant percentage of fishers either shifted to the construction sector to make a living or left the region. As a result, the quantitative recovery potential of oyster production was severely hindered: data from the kumiai report (MPG 2018) indicate a drop from the over 800 workers employed in oyster sea farming in 2009, to only 200 in 2011, with a slow recovery in 2013-2014 to 480, and subsequent stagnation in 2014 and 2015.…”
Section: Oyster Economy In Miyagimentioning
confidence: 99%