Fields of Individuals and Neoliberal Logics: Japanese Soccer Ideals and the 1990s Economic Crisis

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    Abstract

    This article explores the relationship between popular representations of soccer and the rise of neoliberal discourse celebrating a new individualism in Japan at the turn of the millennium, a time when the country experienced sharp economic decline and consequent economic restructuring. Examining dominant vocabularies and practices present in coaching discourse, on soccer fields, and in media portrayals of Japanese men’s and women’s professional leagues, the author argues that rather than a coincidental, coeval mirroring between two seemingly unrelated realms—sports and economic transformations—these relationships point to the positioning of soccer over the past 20 years in Japan as a site to educate and physically train individualistic sensibilities and perspectives suitable to and reinforcing of a neoliberal labor market and governmental system.

    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalScholarship and Professional Work - LAS
    Volume28
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Jan 1 2014

    Keywords

    • J-League
    • Japan
    • Nadeshiko League
    • neoliberalism
    • soccer

    Disciplines

    • Anthropology
    • Asian Studies
    • Social and Cultural Anthropology

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