1 / 23

Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb 12, 2008

Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb 12, 2008. Terms for leisure in Japan. Reja (leisure) Yoka ( 余暇) Asobi (play). Pachinko Parlor. Mizu Sh ōbai. “Water business” (nightlife of urban Japan)

menefer
Download Presentation

Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb 12, 2008

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Politics of Leisure and RecreationFeb 12, 2008

  2. Terms for leisure in Japan Reja (leisure) Yoka (余暇) Asobi (play)

  3. Pachinko Parlor

  4. Mizu Shōbai • “Water business” (nightlife of urban Japan) • Earlier incarnations of mizu shōbai were the floating World (ukiyo) and yūkaku (pleasure quarters); elite men with money consorted with beautiful courtesans (geisha) skilled in various arts

  5. Subway Ride to Work

  6. Anne Allison’s Nightwork • Interested in nexus of Work and Play; and blurring of boundaries between work and play • chose to research practice of corporate-sponsored entertainment (settai) • Facilitate business transactions • Bond worker to the company: allegiance, dedication • Interfirm spending higher than intra-firm spending

  7. Corporate Masculinity • Masculinity is produced through workplace relations • Workaholic male • Lewd male E.g. Sukebei - sanctioned lewdness

  8. Hostess • Jokes, cajoles, teases, fills glasses, asks after clients’ health • Primary service is TALK (sexualized banter) • Facilitates HOMOSOCIALITY • Hostess is a sexually interesting agent but off-limits;

  9. Worker bonds to corporation even though not that committed • Company culture creates a series of distinctions in mind of worker: • work/after-hours; • hostess club/pink salon; • Responsibility/relief • Home/Family falls into the ‘work’ category

  10. Family and Home • Not antithesis to work • Wife in total charge of household • Wife primary parent and takes care of all matters related to family except breadwinning

  11. Women in Allison’s Analysis • Hostesses: Create Fantasy and incite Desire; produce Homosociality • Pink Salons: Relief, Escape, Pleasure • Wives: Mothers of Children

  12. Allison’s Research • Overview of Fieldwork p13

  13. Response Paper: 3 Questions • 750 + words; post on course website by 9 pm Wednesday • 1. Allison states that the sexual service of hostesses operates as a fetish. Discuss what she means by the term fetish. Why does she see it as a valuable commodity and for whom is it valuable? • 2. What is homosociality? How does the fetish help to create homosociality?

  14. 3. Marx and Durkheim each offer their own analyses of leisure and recreation activities. Select the interpretation that you find more convincing. Summarize this analysis, then explain why you find it more convincing. To support your argument, you may draw on Allison’s ethnography or on other examples of leisure and recreation that you know of.

More Related