The making of national robot history in Japan: monozukuri, enculturation and cultural lineage of robots

This paper contributes a genealogical perspective to the social sciences study of robots in Japan, proposing a widely applicable research on “robot cultures.” The author discusses the corporate and governmental strategies and mechanisms that are shaping a national robot culture through establishing...

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Main Author: Kovacic, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2018
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author Kovacic, M
author_facet Kovacic, M
author_sort Kovacic, M
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description This paper contributes a genealogical perspective to the social sciences study of robots in Japan, proposing a widely applicable research on “robot cultures.” The author discusses the corporate and governmental strategies and mechanisms that are shaping a national robot culture through establishing robot “lineages” and a national robot history which can have significant implications for both humans and robots. The paper contributes discussions on monozukuri (manufacturing) and Nihonjinron (theories on “Japaneseness”) to the existing anthropological consideration of robots, by examining links between monozukuri and robots, robot genealogy, popular culture and robots, and different social rituals and sites that help the enculturation of robots. The paper draws attention to the power relations and hegemonies of robot culture which also imply the existence of plurality and diversity that will require further scholarly attention as the robot phenomenon unfolds.
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spelling oxford-uuid:9e99c300-f629-45af-ad6f-f10f4d406cc22022-03-27T00:51:14ZThe making of national robot history in Japan: monozukuri, enculturation and cultural lineage of robotsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:9e99c300-f629-45af-ad6f-f10f4d406cc2EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordTaylor and Francis2018Kovacic, MThis paper contributes a genealogical perspective to the social sciences study of robots in Japan, proposing a widely applicable research on “robot cultures.” The author discusses the corporate and governmental strategies and mechanisms that are shaping a national robot culture through establishing robot “lineages” and a national robot history which can have significant implications for both humans and robots. The paper contributes discussions on monozukuri (manufacturing) and Nihonjinron (theories on “Japaneseness”) to the existing anthropological consideration of robots, by examining links between monozukuri and robots, robot genealogy, popular culture and robots, and different social rituals and sites that help the enculturation of robots. The paper draws attention to the power relations and hegemonies of robot culture which also imply the existence of plurality and diversity that will require further scholarly attention as the robot phenomenon unfolds.
spellingShingle Kovacic, M
The making of national robot history in Japan: monozukuri, enculturation and cultural lineage of robots
title The making of national robot history in Japan: monozukuri, enculturation and cultural lineage of robots
title_full The making of national robot history in Japan: monozukuri, enculturation and cultural lineage of robots
title_fullStr The making of national robot history in Japan: monozukuri, enculturation and cultural lineage of robots
title_full_unstemmed The making of national robot history in Japan: monozukuri, enculturation and cultural lineage of robots
title_short The making of national robot history in Japan: monozukuri, enculturation and cultural lineage of robots
title_sort making of national robot history in japan monozukuri enculturation and cultural lineage of robots
work_keys_str_mv AT kovacicm themakingofnationalrobothistoryinjapanmonozukurienculturationandculturallineageofrobots
AT kovacicm makingofnationalrobothistoryinjapanmonozukurienculturationandculturallineageofrobots