Description
Kurotani interviewed and spent time with more than 120 women in three U.S. locations with sizable expatriate Japanese communities: Centerville, a pseudonymous Midwestern town; the New York metropolitan area; and North Carolina's Research Triangle area. She highlights the contradictory situations faced by the transient wives. Their husbands' assignments in the United States typically last from three to five years, and they frequently emphasize the temporariness of their situation, referring to it as a "long vacation." Yet they are responsible for creating comfortable homes for their families, which necessitates producing a familiar and permanent environment. Kurotani looks at the dynamic friendships that develop among the wives and describes their feelings about returning to Japan. She conveys how their sense of themselves as Japanese women, of home, and of their relationships with family members are altered by their personal experiences of transnational homemaking.
An ethnography about 'Japan outside of Japan' - specifically, how Japanese families on corporate re-assignment in the United States recreate their homeland within domestic spaces
About the Author
Sawa Kurotani is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Redlands in Redlands, California.
Reviews
"Sawa Kurotani reveals the centrality of women's domesticity to transnational mobility among Japanese families and families everywhere. She has a fine and affectionate ethnographic eye."-Karen Kelsky, author of Women on the Verge: Japanese Women, Western Dreams
"Sawa Kurotani's absorbing study offers new ethnographic insight into a common manifestation of globalization-the social bubbles created by corporate, government, and military families on foreign assignments. She sensitively analyzes how Japanese company wives in the U.S. work hard to maintain Japanese domesticity and how these efforts inadvertently but powerfully forge a new self-awareness. Home Away from Home teaches us a valuable lesson about how the local is constituted within the global."-William W. Kelly, editor of Fanning the Flames: Fans and Consumer Culture in Contemporary Japan
"For anyone interested in transnational identities and the domestic work of globalisation this book makes fascinating reading. . . . A tantalising invitation to explore further the intimates spaces of dislocation and transnational angst, particularly as felt by women." -- Cory Taylor * Asian Studies Review *
"Sawa Kurotani offers an engaging and persuasive account of how the kaigai-chuzai experience, or corporate overseas posting, affects Japanese housewives. . . . There is much to recommend in this enjoyable and elegantly written study." -- Ronald P. Loftus * Journal of Gender Studies *
"Home Away from Home offers an interesting and highly readable account of small communities of Japanese expatriate wives in the United States. . . . These are indeed interesting findings which add to our understanding of aspects of the very complex phenomenon of globalisation." -- Rumi Sakamoto * The Australian Journal of Anthropology *
"Sawa Kurotani's ethnographic work . . . is . . . a delightfully easy read for anyone interested in the ideology of Japanese domestic life. . . . Revealing. . . . Fascinating." -- Colin Donald * Daily Yomiuri *
Book Information
ISBN 9780822336228
Author Sawa Kurotani
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint Duke University Press
Publisher Duke University Press
Weight(grams) 358g