My neighbour the Animalien: constructing Japanese national cultural identity from invasive alien animal species discourse in the 21st century

In this study, I analyse the verbal and visual language used in Japanese mass media materials (newspaper pieces and a TV variety show) and state pamphlets to understand why the invasive alien animal as an Other persists despite decades of residency from a cultural angle, rather than ecological. As a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ghosh, C
Other Authors: Yamaura, C
Format: Thesis
Language:Japanese
English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
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author Ghosh, C
author2 Yamaura, C
author_facet Yamaura, C
Ghosh, C
author_sort Ghosh, C
collection OXFORD
description In this study, I analyse the verbal and visual language used in Japanese mass media materials (newspaper pieces and a TV variety show) and state pamphlets to understand why the invasive alien animal as an Other persists despite decades of residency from a cultural angle, rather than ecological. As an example of banal nationalism, I examine this discourse for the languages in which 21st century national identity is expressed and constructed in terms of identity coordinates in space-time. With humans using these ‘animaliens’ as ‘space transformers’ and ‘time telescopes’ for self-reflection in their encounters, I find that invasive alien animals are also opportunistically used as props for teaching national cultural symbol literacy and the languages to express membership to the national culture. These languages are folklore, nostalgia and self-responsibility. Folkloric language turns individual self-exploratory fantasy spaces into nationalised exploratory fantasies. Nostalgia and self-responsibility languages build relationships with past and future-communities that serve the present. The alien animals’ Othering persists because it is useful to the majority. This approach to animaliens fills a literature gap where the human cultural coexistence with these animals has been largely ignored in favour of conservation biology.
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spelling oxford-uuid:0b8f05fc-09e1-4c49-8f5f-279e4a668c4f2024-12-01T11:39:15ZMy neighbour the Animalien: constructing Japanese national cultural identity from invasive alien animal species discourse in the 21st centuryThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccuuid:0b8f05fc-09e1-4c49-8f5f-279e4a668c4fContemporary JapanAnthropology of animalsNationalismIntroduced organismsJapaneseEnglishHyrax Deposit2021Ghosh, CYamaura, CIn this study, I analyse the verbal and visual language used in Japanese mass media materials (newspaper pieces and a TV variety show) and state pamphlets to understand why the invasive alien animal as an Other persists despite decades of residency from a cultural angle, rather than ecological. As an example of banal nationalism, I examine this discourse for the languages in which 21st century national identity is expressed and constructed in terms of identity coordinates in space-time. With humans using these ‘animaliens’ as ‘space transformers’ and ‘time telescopes’ for self-reflection in their encounters, I find that invasive alien animals are also opportunistically used as props for teaching national cultural symbol literacy and the languages to express membership to the national culture. These languages are folklore, nostalgia and self-responsibility. Folkloric language turns individual self-exploratory fantasy spaces into nationalised exploratory fantasies. Nostalgia and self-responsibility languages build relationships with past and future-communities that serve the present. The alien animals’ Othering persists because it is useful to the majority. This approach to animaliens fills a literature gap where the human cultural coexistence with these animals has been largely ignored in favour of conservation biology.
spellingShingle Contemporary Japan
Anthropology of animals
Nationalism
Introduced organisms
Ghosh, C
My neighbour the Animalien: constructing Japanese national cultural identity from invasive alien animal species discourse in the 21st century
title My neighbour the Animalien: constructing Japanese national cultural identity from invasive alien animal species discourse in the 21st century
title_full My neighbour the Animalien: constructing Japanese national cultural identity from invasive alien animal species discourse in the 21st century
title_fullStr My neighbour the Animalien: constructing Japanese national cultural identity from invasive alien animal species discourse in the 21st century
title_full_unstemmed My neighbour the Animalien: constructing Japanese national cultural identity from invasive alien animal species discourse in the 21st century
title_short My neighbour the Animalien: constructing Japanese national cultural identity from invasive alien animal species discourse in the 21st century
title_sort my neighbour the animalien constructing japanese national cultural identity from invasive alien animal species discourse in the 21st century
topic Contemporary Japan
Anthropology of animals
Nationalism
Introduced organisms
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