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The (Un)social Smells of Death: Changing Tides in Contemporary Japan

Publication ,  Journal Article
Allison, A
Published in: Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus
June 3, 2023

In the face of a high aging population, decline in the rates of marriage and childbirth, and post-growth economic shifts, sociality is downsizing in Japan away from the family to more single lifestyles. The effects of this on the necro-landscape are examined here in terms of what happens to those who die all alone, untended by others (“lonely death”) as well as new practices emerging to replace the family grave and family caregivers with an alternative social model (what is called “promiscuous care”). The essay argues that, at both ends of this spectrum, smell can be used to register both the unsociality of a bad death, as well as the shifting sociality of new ways of handling the dead. (This short article is based on Being Dead Otherwise, recently published by Duke University Press).

Duke Scholars

Published In

Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus

EISSN

1557-4660

Publication Date

June 3, 2023

Volume

21

Issue

6
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Allison, A. (2023). The (Un)social Smells of Death: Changing Tides in Contemporary Japan. Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus, 21(6).
Allison, A. “The (Un)social Smells of Death: Changing Tides in Contemporary Japan.” Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus 21, no. 6 (June 3, 2023).
Allison A. The (Un)social Smells of Death: Changing Tides in Contemporary Japan. Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus. 2023 Jun 3;21(6).
Allison, A. “The (Un)social Smells of Death: Changing Tides in Contemporary Japan.” Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus, vol. 21, no. 6, June 2023.
Allison A. The (Un)social Smells of Death: Changing Tides in Contemporary Japan. Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus. 2023 Jun 3;21(6).

Published In

Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus

EISSN

1557-4660

Publication Date

June 3, 2023

Volume

21

Issue

6