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Nicolas Tajan, Mental Health and Social Withdrawal in Contemporary Japan: Beyond the Hikikomori Spectrum

Year 2022, Volume: 1 Issue: 2, 108 - 111, 30.12.2022

Abstract

This book stands on its own in the Japan Anthropology Workshop Series since it was penned by a non-anthropologist on a subject that is not typically explored in the humanities and social sciences: hikikomori. Hikikomori, or acute social withdrawal, is a term coined by the Japanese psychiatrist Saitō Tamaki, and is seen in Japan more frequently than in any other country that has a strong cultural links to Japanese society. Because of their status as “social refugees” (p. 134) the hikikomori are inherently resistant to medical treatment, which is why this study focuses on the gap in much-needed anthropological studies into mental health in Japan. It is an important contribution to the body of knowledge on hikikomori because of its combination of clinical and anthropological methods. Tajan is challenging some of the current psychiatric knowledge and essentialized conceptions about hikikomori by integrating his clinical knowledge with his ethnographic fieldwork and anthropological curiosity.

Year 2022, Volume: 1 Issue: 2, 108 - 111, 30.12.2022

Abstract

Year 2022, Volume: 1 Issue: 2, 108 - 111, 30.12.2022

Abstract

Year 2022, Volume: 1 Issue: 2, 108 - 111, 30.12.2022

Abstract

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Details

Primary Language English
Journal Section Book Reviews
Authors

Aleyna Arıkan This is me 0000-0003-0418-4663

Publication Date December 30, 2022
Submission Date August 15, 2022
Published in Issue Year 2022 Volume: 1 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Arıkan, A. (2022). Nicolas Tajan, Mental Health and Social Withdrawal in Contemporary Japan: Beyond the Hikikomori Spectrum. Bölge Çalışmaları Dergisi, 1(2), 108-111.