2015
DOI: 10.1353/anq.2015.0014
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Phatic Traces: Sociality in Contemporary Japan

Abstract: Widely recognized as a social problem in Japan, kodokushi (solitary death) stereotypically happens when old people living alone, detached from kin and neighbors, die alone without being noticed immediately, leaving the body to decompose. Reorganizing Japanese discourses of kinship, locality, and other modalities of “connection” ( en ), practices and projects concerning solitary death articulate an emergent fantasy of sociality. I analyze this fantasy as an ideology of communication that draws upon idioms of “c… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…What variety of channels are available for processes of socialization beyond face‐to‐face networks of attention (e.g., baby monitors, cell phones, parental controls in digital media, YouTube instructional videos, etc.)? In posing this kind of question, we also draw upon a renewed interest in linguistic anthropology for theorizing concepts like the channel and the network (e.g., Kockelman ; Nozawa ; Smith ), concepts that perhaps have a special, relatively unexplored import for the study of language socialization (Smith ). What happens to our concept of socialization when we—like southern Peruvian parents—admit into our ranks of possible socializers an agent like a “network of socialization”?…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What variety of channels are available for processes of socialization beyond face‐to‐face networks of attention (e.g., baby monitors, cell phones, parental controls in digital media, YouTube instructional videos, etc.)? In posing this kind of question, we also draw upon a renewed interest in linguistic anthropology for theorizing concepts like the channel and the network (e.g., Kockelman ; Nozawa ; Smith ), concepts that perhaps have a special, relatively unexplored import for the study of language socialization (Smith ). What happens to our concept of socialization when we—like southern Peruvian parents—admit into our ranks of possible socializers an agent like a “network of socialization”?…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, benc ßas furnish transgenerational kin interactions with a "substrate of sensory-emotive experience" whose affective, kinesthetic, spiritual and sonic qualities furnish the public sphere with vernacular specificity (Hirschkind 2006, 122). I thus join a chorus of recent scholars who are attuned to the phatic dimensions of large-scale social transformations such as those from economic development (Elyachar 2010), kinship and aging (Nozawa 2015), multiculturalism (Slotta 2015), commercial exchange (Brown 2016;Muir 2016), and religious transformation (Schulthies 2016).…”
Section: Junior Kinsperson Benc ßA? (Blessing)mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The phrase is telling: a person who “cannot bear to see money” will spend every found cent with profligate abandon. The person who “cannot bear to hear music” will start to dance whenever music is played, no matter the occasion (see Nozawa , 385 on “indexical triggering”). To be “sick” is to be unable to bear the sight of factional adversaries without being overwhelmed by one's vitriolic partisanship.…”
Section: Blessing Political Factionalism and Civilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The resulting database remains indefinitely open to further additions, an evolving record of a dynamic relation. Their iterative encounters make possible a singular relationship that is continually nourished by their phatic contact (Nozawa ).…”
Section: The Databasementioning
confidence: 99%