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Discord, Dysfunction, Dystopia
Louise Reader
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The Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami of March 11, 2011 was a complex event. It was a disaster of multiple dimensions, unleashing the linked forces of seismic shock, tsunami, and nuclear radiation. This confluence left a varied array of damage in its wake. The personal traumas of death and loss combined with the social trauma of ruptured families, the economic trauma resulting from the physical destruction, and the psychic trauma arising from an uncertain future.
Such a complex disaster demands a multifaceted exploration into its nature, implications, and meaning. The essays in this collection cross academic and geographic boundaries to explore the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami from a wide range of perspectives and to apply the analytical and interpretive tools of multiple disciplines to the study of the disaster and the various forms of trauma it inflicted.
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Christopher Craig is Professor of Japanese Studies and Head of Research and International Development at the Center for Integrated Japanese Studies at Tohoku University. He published the monograph Middlemen of Modernity: Local Elites and Agricultural Development in Modern Japan with the University of Hawai’i Press in 2021 and has edited eight volumes in the Hasekura Intercultural Studies Series with Mimesis International.
Olga Kopylova defended her PhD thesis on media mix and adaptations at the Graduate School of Manga Studies at Kyoto Seika University. She is currently employed as a translator and a lecturer at the Faculty of Arts and Letters, Tohoku University (with courses on contemporary Japanese popular culture). Her research interests include comparative media studies, fandom studies, adaptation studies, and narratology of popular media texts.
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