On more-than-human labor: revisiting Japan’s ecological modernity and the politics and ethics of interspecies entanglements

IF 0.6 Q2 AREA STUDIES Japan Forum Pub Date : 2020-12-10 DOI:10.1080/09555803.2020.1857817
Keisuke Yamada
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract This article contributes to the discussion of the concept of ecological modernity in the context of Japanese studies. This concept generally describes modern political tactics to draw a distinction between the human and the nonhuman, reconfiguring the former’s place in and relationship with the natural world. My study focuses on the human-silkworm relation and different forms of labor in the Japanese sericulture industry from the late nineteenth century to the present. Looking closely at this specific form of interspecies relationality, I explore the extent to which the physical labor of jokō (female workers) and the metabolic labor of silkworms are together controlled and maintained by political means at a national level. Revisiting Japan’s ecological modernity from this perspective, I argue, helps reveal the state’s exploitative attitude toward both human and natural resources in more nuanced ways. The ethical and political dimension of my genealogical work also includes an attempt to raise ecological awareness about our symbiotic coexistence, as we are ineluctably bound up or entangled with others, human and nonhuman alike.
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论人类劳动之外的东西:日本生态现代性与种间纠葛的政治伦理再探
本文对生态现代性概念在日本研究背景下的探讨有所贡献。这一概念通常描述了现代政治策略,以区分人类和非人类,重新配置前者在自然世界中的位置及其与自然世界的关系。我的研究重点是19世纪末至今日本蚕业的人蚕关系和不同的劳动形式。仔细观察这种特定形式的物种间关系,我探索了在国家层面上,蚕的体力劳动(女工)和代谢劳动在多大程度上受到政治手段的控制和维持。我认为,从这个角度重新审视日本的生态现代性,有助于以更细致入微的方式揭示国家对人力和自然资源的剥削态度。我的家谱工作的伦理和政治维度也包括试图提高我们共生共存的生态意识,因为我们不可避免地与他人联系在一起或纠缠在一起,无论是人类还是非人类。
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来源期刊
Japan Forum
Japan Forum AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
16.70%
发文量
29
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