Speculation and Memory in Late Twentieth-Century Tokyo
FAIN: FA-51531-05
Jordan Alexander Sand
Georgetown University (Washington, DC 20057-0001)
This project studies nostalgia as a force shaping postindustrial urbanism. It does so by focusing on Tokyo, a city better known today for its high-tech modernity than its orientation to the past. In the 1980’s, as Tokyo was transformed into a world city, architects, writers, activists, and marketers developed a range of creative ways to express local identity and make local history visible. Close examination of related movements in disparate fields will reveal some of the contours of a sophisticated Japanese public culture that has gone virtually ignored elsewhere. It will also provide a dynamic model for understanding the relation between intellectuals, consumers, memory and the physical environment in contemporary cities.
Associated Products
Tokyo Vernacular: Common Spaces, Local Histories, Found Objects (Book)Title: Tokyo Vernacular: Common Spaces, Local Histories, Found Objects
Author: Jordan Sand
Abstract: Preserved buildings and historic districts, museums and reconstructions have become an important part of the landscape of cities around the world. Beginning in the 1970s, Tokyo participated in this trend. However, repeated destruction and rapid redevelopment left the city with little building stock of recognized historical value. Late twentieth-century Tokyo thus presents an illuminating case of the emergence of a new sense of history in the city’s physical environment, since it required both a shift in perceptions of value and a search for history in the margins and interstices of a rapidly modernizing cityscape. Scholarship to date has tended to view historicism in the postindustrial context as either a genuine response to loss, or as a cynical commodification of the past. The historical process of Tokyo’s historicization suggests other interpretations. Moving from the politics of the public square to the invention of neighborhood community, to oddities found and appropriated in the streets, to the consecration of everyday scenes and artifacts as heritage in museums, Tokyo Vernacular traces the rediscovery of the past—sometimes in unlikely forms—in a city with few traditional landmarks. Tokyo's rediscovered past was mobilized as part of a new politics of the everyday after the failure of mass politics in the 1960s. Rather than conceiving the city as national center and claiming public space as national citizens, the post-1960s generation came to value the local places and things that embodied the vernacular language of the city, and to seek what could be claimed as common property outside the spaces of corporate capitalism and the state.
Year: 2013
Primary URL:
http://www.ucpress.edu/book.php?isbn=9780520280373Publisher: University of California Press
Type: Single author monograph
ISBN: 9780520280373
Copy sent to NEH?: No