Law and Justice in Japanese Popular Culture

£43.99

Law and Justice in Japanese Popular Culture

From Crime Fighting Robots to Duelling Pocket Monsters

The Arts: art forms Literary studies: general Regional / International studies Popular culture Sociology Law and society, sociology of law Social law and Medical law History

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Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 27 June 2018

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 3 Mb

ISBN: 9781351470506


Introduction

In a world of globalised media, Japanese popular culture has become a significant fountainhead for images, narrative, artefacts, and identity. From Pikachu, to instantly identifiable manga memes, to the darkness of adult anime, and the hyper-consumerism of product tie-ins, Japan has bequeathed to a globalised world a rich variety of ways to imagine, communicate, and interrogate tradition and change, the self, and the technological future.

Within these foci, questions of law have often not been far from the surface: the crime and justice of Astro Boy; the property and contract of Pokémon; the ecological justice of Nausicaä; Shinto’s focus on order and balance; and the anxieties of origins in J-horror.

This volume brings together a range of global scholars to reflect on and critically engage with the place of law and justice in Japan’s popular cultural legacy. It explores not only the global impact of this legacy, but what the images, games, narratives, and artefacts that comprise it reveal about law, humanity, justice, and authority in the twenty-first century.

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