This is the final version of the article. Available from University of Pittsburgh via the DOI in this record.This article examines how the category of the elderly in Japan is constructed through diverse forms of care, understood as moral practices intrinsic to peoples’ senses of self. It offers an analysis of a range of informal as well as institutional configurations of care in the Japanese urban context, highlighting the complexity as well as the overlapping nature of these diverse arrangements. It also explores ethnographically how older people experience these arrangements as they move through different sites of care, and how they negotiate the conflicting demands on their sense of self. The various types of care at work in these setti...
Social innovation is not only about tangible new products, services, policies, and laws, but also ab...
This dissertation is an ethnography of elderly life in Japan. Aging populations present serious chal...
This is the final version of the article. Available from HAU Society for Ethnographic Theory via the...
This article examines how the category of the elderly in Japan is constructed through diverse forms ...
What constitutes good care in aging Japan? In this thesis, I explore eldercare practices from the va...
As rapid social changes occur around the world, accompanied by increasingly larger numbers of elderl...
The multifaceted significance of institutional care for elderly people in contemporary Japan is anal...
This chapter examines ‘successful aging’ through its impacts on formal care workers in Japan. It is ...
Anthropologists use the concept of subjectivity to describe the interplay between feeling, experienc...
Care work requires a vulnerability and ethical responsiveness towards the cared-for, including an op...
This article looks at historical changes in the cultural superstructure defining the proper organiza...
This paper examines the impact of providing informal care to elderly parents on caregivers' subjecti...
Known for a tradition of Confucian filial piety, East Asian societies have some of the oldest and mo...
Amidst widespread concerns about aging on several levels ranging from the personal to the societal, ...
The multifaceted significance of institutional care for elderly people in contemporary Japan is anal...
Social innovation is not only about tangible new products, services, policies, and laws, but also ab...
This dissertation is an ethnography of elderly life in Japan. Aging populations present serious chal...
This is the final version of the article. Available from HAU Society for Ethnographic Theory via the...
This article examines how the category of the elderly in Japan is constructed through diverse forms ...
What constitutes good care in aging Japan? In this thesis, I explore eldercare practices from the va...
As rapid social changes occur around the world, accompanied by increasingly larger numbers of elderl...
The multifaceted significance of institutional care for elderly people in contemporary Japan is anal...
This chapter examines ‘successful aging’ through its impacts on formal care workers in Japan. It is ...
Anthropologists use the concept of subjectivity to describe the interplay between feeling, experienc...
Care work requires a vulnerability and ethical responsiveness towards the cared-for, including an op...
This article looks at historical changes in the cultural superstructure defining the proper organiza...
This paper examines the impact of providing informal care to elderly parents on caregivers' subjecti...
Known for a tradition of Confucian filial piety, East Asian societies have some of the oldest and mo...
Amidst widespread concerns about aging on several levels ranging from the personal to the societal, ...
The multifaceted significance of institutional care for elderly people in contemporary Japan is anal...
Social innovation is not only about tangible new products, services, policies, and laws, but also ab...
This dissertation is an ethnography of elderly life in Japan. Aging populations present serious chal...
This is the final version of the article. Available from HAU Society for Ethnographic Theory via the...