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E-grāmata: Law and Justice in Japanese Popular Culture: From Crime Fighting Robots to Duelling Pocket Monsters

Edited by , Edited by (Griffith University, Australia), Edited by (St Mary's University College, Twickenham, UK)
  • Formāts: 288 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Jun-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351470506
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  • Formāts: 288 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Jun-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351470506
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In a world of globalised media, Japanese popular culture has become a signifi cant fountainhead for images, narrative, artefacts, and identity. From Pikachu, to instantly identifi able 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; Shintos focus on order and balance; and the anxieties of origins in J- horror. This volume brings together a range of global scholars to refl ect on and critically engage with the place of law and justice in Japans 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.
List of illustrations
viii
Preface ix
List of contributors
xi
1 Crime fighting robots and duelling pocket monsters: Law and Justice in Japanese Popular Culture
1(16)
Ashley Pearson
Thomas Giddens
Kieran Tranter
PART I Possibilities of justice
17(76)
2 The symptoms of the just: Psycho-Pass, judg(e)ment, and the asymptomatic commons
19(13)
Daniel Hourigan
3 Pirates, giants and the state: legal authority in manga and anime
32(12)
James C. Fisher
4 Traumatic origins in Hart and Ringu
44(14)
Penny Crofts
Honni Van Rijswijk
5 Justice in the sea of corruption: Nausicaa as ecological jurisprudence
58(16)
Thomas Giddens
6 Masterful trainers and villainous liberators: law and justice in Pokemon Black and White
74(19)
Dale Mitchell
PART II The legal subject
93(60)
7 Doing right in the world with 100,000 horsepower: Osamu Tezuka's Tetsuwan Atomu (Astro Boy), essence, posthumanity and techno-humanism
95(17)
Kieran Tranter
8 Caught in couture: regulating clothing and the body in Kill la Kill
112(14)
Rosie Taylor-Harding
9 `Holy trans-jurisdictional representations of justice, Batman!': globalisation, persona and mask in Kuwata's Batmanga and Morrison's Batman, Incorporated
126(27)
Timothy D. Peters
PART III The power and problem of the image
153(58)
10 `Finding the law' through creating and consuming gay manga in Japan: from heteronormativity to queer activism
155(13)
Thomas Baudinette
11 Regulating counterpublics in yaoi online fan communities
168(15)
Scott Beattie
12 `Is yaoi illegal?!': let's get real about the potential criminalisation of yaoi
183(13)
Hadeel Al-Alosi
13 Constitutional analysis of secondary works in Japan: from otaku to the world
196(15)
Yuichiro Tsuji
PART IV Specificities of law and justice in everyday Japan
211(63)
14 `The world is rotten': execution and power in Death Note and the Japanese capital punishment system
213(14)
Ashley Pearson
15 Debts, family, and identity after the collapse of the bubble: Miyabe Miyuki's All She Was Worth
227(11)
Giorgio Fabio Colombo
16 Rules and unruliness in manga depictions of community police boxes
238(17)
Richard Powell
Hideyuki Kumaki
17 The image-characters of criminal justice in Tokyo
255(19)
Peter D. Rush
Alison Young
Index 274
Ashley Pearson is a PhD candidate at Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia.



Thomas Giddens is a Senior Lecturer at St Marys University, Twickenham, United Kingdom.



Kieran Tranter is an Associate Professor at Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia.