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Identity, Ideology, and Cinema: Making Sense of Japanu27s Foreign and Security Policies in the 1950s and 2000s

机译:身份,意识形态和电影:在20世纪五六十年代对日本的外交和安全政策有所了解

摘要

Japan is an important ally of the United States–the world’s third biggest economy, and one of the regional great powers in Asia. Making sense of Japan’s foreign and security policies is crucial for the future of peace and stability in Northeast Asia, where the possible sources of conflict such as territorial disputes or the disputes over Japan’s war legacy issues are observed.This dissertation explored Japan’s foreign and security policies based on Japan’s identities and unconscious ideologies. It employed an analysis of selected Japanese films from the late 1940s to the late 1950s, as well as from the late 1990s to the mid-2000s. The analysis demonstrated that Japan’s foreign and security policies could be understood in terms of a broader social narrative that was visible in Japanese popular cultural products, including films and literatures. Narratives of Japanese families from the patriarch’s point of view, for example, had constantly shaped Japan’s foreign and security policies. As a result, the world was ordered hierarchically in the eyes of the Japan Self. In the 1950s, Japan tenaciously constructed close but asymmetrical security relations with the U.S. in which Japan willingly subjugated itself to the U.S. In the 2000s, Japan again constructed close relations with the U.S. by doing its best to support American responses to the 9/11 terrorist attacks by mobilizing Japan’s SDFs in the way Japan had never done in the past.The concepts of identity and unconscious ideology are helpful in understanding how Japan’s own understanding of self, of others, and of the world have shaped its own behaviors. These concepts also enable Japan to reevaluate its own behaviors reflexively, which departs from existing alternative approaches. This study provided a critical analytical explanation of the dynamics at work in Japan’s sense of identity, particularly with regard to its foreign and security policies.
机译:日本是美国的重要盟国,美国是世界第三大经济体,也是亚洲的区域大国之一。理解日本的外交和安全政策对于东北亚和平与稳定的未来至关重要,在东北亚,人们会观察到领土争端或关于日本战争遗留问题的争端等可能的冲突根源。本文探讨了日本的外交和安全政策基于日本的身份和无意识的意识形态。它对1940年代末至1950年代末以及1990年代末至2000年代中期的精选日本电影进行了分析。分析表明,可以从包括电影和文学在内的日本流行文化产品中看到的更广泛的社会叙事来理解日本的外交和安全政策。例如,从族长的角度讲日本家庭的叙事一直在影响着日本的外交和安全政策。结果,在“日本自我”的眼中,世界是等级分明的。在1950年代,日本与美国顽强地建立了紧密但不对称的安全关系,其中日本乐于屈服于美国。在2000年代,日本通过尽力支持美国对9/11恐怖分子的反应再次与美国建立了密切关系。通过以日本从未有过的动员日本自卫队的方式进行攻击,认同和无意识意识形态的概念有助于理解日本自己对自我,他人和世界的理解如何塑造自己的行为。这些概念还使日本能够反思地重新评估自己的行为,这与现有的替代方法背道而驰。这项研究对日本身份认同中的动态变化,尤其是在其外交和安全政策方面,提供了重要的分析性解释。

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    Ito Yukari;

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