Lexington Books
Pages: 182
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-9204-7 • Hardback • December 2014 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-1-4985-0766-0 • Paperback • May 2016 • $54.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-9205-4 • eBook • December 2014 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
Paul Christensen is assistant professor of anthropology at the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.
Chapter 1: Drying Out
Chapter 2: Divine Drink
Chapter 3: Sobriety and Disease
Chapter 4: Sober Groupings
Chapter 5: Moral Failures
Chapter 6: Ten Yen Coins
Chapter 7: Futsū or Fushigi: Normally Drunk and Oddly Sober
Chapter 8: The Imperial Drunkard
This is a good book. . . .This is a fascinating book to read, exploring a wholly new ethnographic area of research. For anyone wanting to know about alcohol and alcoholism in Japan, this book provides a very good place to begin.
— Social Science Japan Journal
This readable and thought-provoking study of alcoholism in Japan revolves around a fundamental dilemma confronting Japanese alcoholics in their attempts to achieve sobriety.
— American Anthropologist
The major contribution of the book is that it shows the complex interconnections of masculine sobriety group membership with the gendered, embodied, (homo)social, (cross-)cultural, and historical dimensions of alcohol consumption in contemporary Japan. Especially for readers unfamiliar with Japan, there is much to think (critically) about here.
— The Journal of Japanese Studies
Toasted salarymen weaving through nighttime streets and swaying drunkenly on the last train of the evening is a common enough sight in Japan. Christensen's study explores the cultural history surrounding alcohol consumption, as well as the awkward understandings and treatments for alcoholics. By tracing the way drinking is intertwined with notions of masculinity and male sociality, Christensen exposes the damaging struggles faced by men who want to dodge expectations that they imbibe with others. This is a superb book that addresses a gap in our knowledge about contemporary Japan.
— Laura Miller, University of Missouri-St. Louis
Drinking in Japan is a powerful cultural imperative and social lubricant, especially for being and becoming a man. Christensen looks beyond the camaraderie to show how easy it is to drink up and how challenging it is to dry out in contemporary Japan. He provides a sensitive and moving analysis of the social worlds of drinking, of those individuals who are led to excess, and of the sobriety organizations that provide pathways to living in recovery for those desperate enough and brave enough to confront their condition. His ethnography of alcoholism and alcohol abstention as daily experience, lived identity, and organized support is a thought-provoking contribution to Japan studies and a rare analysis of the cultural framing of substance abuse and recovery therapies.
— William W. Kelly, Yale University