Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Precarity's Pirate: The Fictive Afterlives of Idemitsu Sazō
View through CrossRef
AbstractWhen the famously nationalistic Japanese author Hyakuta Naoki published his best-selling novelA Man Called Pirate(Kaizoku to yobareta otoko) in 2012, which subsequently became both a manga and a major film, he renewed interest in the midcentury oil baron Idemitsu Sazō, using him as the model for the novel's lead character. Hyakuta claims to have aimed to inspire the country, reeling from decades of slow growth as well as the 2011 tsunami and nuclear disaster, by featuring a visionary Japanese leader motivated primarily by love for his employees and his country. This article traces the efforts across these media to render Idemitsu as a credible character, particularly in dealing with his real-life family as well as his “family” of employees. It argues that the partial disappearance of the “real” Idemitsu in these versions of Hyakuta's novel allowed the production of a more believable one—made believable in part because of the essential Japanese values that he ostensibly represents, even as the constraints on these representations hint at fissures and tensions in contemporary political use of biographical fiction and film.
Title: Precarity's Pirate: The Fictive Afterlives of Idemitsu Sazō
Description:
AbstractWhen the famously nationalistic Japanese author Hyakuta Naoki published his best-selling novelA Man Called Pirate(Kaizoku to yobareta otoko) in 2012, which subsequently became both a manga and a major film, he renewed interest in the midcentury oil baron Idemitsu Sazō, using him as the model for the novel's lead character.
Hyakuta claims to have aimed to inspire the country, reeling from decades of slow growth as well as the 2011 tsunami and nuclear disaster, by featuring a visionary Japanese leader motivated primarily by love for his employees and his country.
This article traces the efforts across these media to render Idemitsu as a credible character, particularly in dealing with his real-life family as well as his “family” of employees.
It argues that the partial disappearance of the “real” Idemitsu in these versions of Hyakuta's novel allowed the production of a more believable one—made believable in part because of the essential Japanese values that he ostensibly represents, even as the constraints on these representations hint at fissures and tensions in contemporary political use of biographical fiction and film.
Related Results
Pirate Politics
Pirate Politics
An examination of the Pirate political movement in Europe analyzes its advocacy for free expression and the preservation of the Internet as a commons.
The Swedish Pi...
How life course dynamics matter for precarity in later life
How life course dynamics matter for precarity in later life
Precarity is at the heart of human experience. In every period of life, all people would seem to face some minimal types and levels of precarity simply in being alive and in having...
PRECARITY AND LATER LIFE: UNDERSTANDING NEW INEQUALITIES AND RISKS IN LATER LIFE
PRECARITY AND LATER LIFE: UNDERSTANDING NEW INEQUALITIES AND RISKS IN LATER LIFE
Abstract
This symposium addresses debates around the theme of precarity and its implications for understanding social and economic changes affecting the lives of old...
Slaveri hos Tuaregerne i Sahara
Slaveri hos Tuaregerne i Sahara
Slavery among the Tuareg in the SaharaA preliminary analysis of its structure.Slavery is an institution of very considerable age. In Europe and the Orient it has been common for as...
A framework to identify precarity in the social sciences: insights from qualitative research
A framework to identify precarity in the social sciences: insights from qualitative research
This chapter proposes a framework for identifying and recognising precarity based on qualitative research. It begins with a discussion of the context for precarity from the vantage...
Hydrogen sulfide mimics hypoxic respiratory depression in the isolated brainstem of bullfrogs (Lithobates catesbeianus). (714.3)
Hydrogen sulfide mimics hypoxic respiratory depression in the isolated brainstem of bullfrogs (Lithobates catesbeianus). (714.3)
Previous studies have shown that hypoxia causes a significant depression or cessation of fictive breathing in post‐metamorphic and adult bullfrog brainstems. We tested the hypothes...
Synaptic transmission from muscle afferents during fictive locomotion in the mesencephalic cat
Synaptic transmission from muscle afferents during fictive locomotion in the mesencephalic cat
Modulation of synaptic potentials produced by electrical stimulation of low-threshold muscle afferents in lumbar alpha-motoneurons innervating knee and ankle muscles was studied by...
Precarity, migration and ageing
Precarity, migration and ageing
The profile of older adults in the Global North is changing rapidly with increasing proportions of foreign-born ageing populations. Despite their demographic significance, very lit...

