Crafting selves: power, gender and discourse of identify on a Japanese workplace
Kondo, Dorinne K.
Crafting selves: power, gender and discourse of identify on a Japanese workplace Kondo, Dorinne K. - Chicago University of Chicago Press 1990 - xiii, 346 p., 24 cm.
Kondo's narrative ethnography about power and its cultural effectivity at the level of everyday life delivers. In fact, her informative and creative work was never far from my on writing table during my ethnographic research which resulted in the recent release of my ethnographic monograph, Native Americans in the Carolina Borderlands: A Critical Ethnography. Kondo's work is essential reading for anyone attempting to do ethnography about the complexities of cultural and personal identity formation and their hegemonic articulation in everyday practices. In short, Kondo takes the complicated and, oft-times, abstract theoretical renderings of poststructuralism/postmodernism and points to a way in which they can be enlivened through thick descriptions of everyday lives and situations. One of the finer and insightful aspects of her work is found in her tact of avoiding simplistic theoretical categorizing through the ethnographic utilization of irony and the notion of unintended consequences. A must have for those interested in feminist studies, Japanese culture and society, Cultural Studies, Postmodernism/Poststructuralism, and critical and alternative forms of ethnography.
9780226450445
Women- Employment- Japan
Women- Japan -Social conditions
Women - Japan -Economic conditions
Group identity - Japan
Self- perception in women - Japan
Women - Japan - Identity
305.420952
Crafting selves: power, gender and discourse of identify on a Japanese workplace Kondo, Dorinne K. - Chicago University of Chicago Press 1990 - xiii, 346 p., 24 cm.
Kondo's narrative ethnography about power and its cultural effectivity at the level of everyday life delivers. In fact, her informative and creative work was never far from my on writing table during my ethnographic research which resulted in the recent release of my ethnographic monograph, Native Americans in the Carolina Borderlands: A Critical Ethnography. Kondo's work is essential reading for anyone attempting to do ethnography about the complexities of cultural and personal identity formation and their hegemonic articulation in everyday practices. In short, Kondo takes the complicated and, oft-times, abstract theoretical renderings of poststructuralism/postmodernism and points to a way in which they can be enlivened through thick descriptions of everyday lives and situations. One of the finer and insightful aspects of her work is found in her tact of avoiding simplistic theoretical categorizing through the ethnographic utilization of irony and the notion of unintended consequences. A must have for those interested in feminist studies, Japanese culture and society, Cultural Studies, Postmodernism/Poststructuralism, and critical and alternative forms of ethnography.
9780226450445
Women- Employment- Japan
Women- Japan -Social conditions
Women - Japan -Economic conditions
Group identity - Japan
Self- perception in women - Japan
Women - Japan - Identity
305.420952