Lexington Books
Pages: 158
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-4985-1198-8 • Hardback • March 2015 • $107.00 • (£82.00)
978-1-4985-1200-8 • Paperback • April 2016 • $54.99 • (£42.00)
978-1-4985-1199-5 • eBook • March 2015 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
Tom Gill is professor of social anthropology at the Faculty of International Studies of Meiji Gakuin University, Yokohama.
Chapter 1: Kimitsu Nishikawa and the Town of Kotobuki, 1993-1995
Chapter 2: Kimitsu and Kotobuki, 2004-2007
Chapter 3: The 2007 Conversations
Chapter 4: Kimitsu and Kotobuki to the Present Day
Chapter 5: Commentary
[T]he book is unconventional and defies easy categorization; it is a book about one person, set within a shifting landscape of labor relations in Japan. It is not exactly a case study and has an objective that is both modest and grand—to see in the life history of Nishikawa a ‘great big library’…. [W]here I found myself most pulled in—and how I think this book will be most useful for scholars of Japan and informal/precarious labor—is when reading Kimitsu’s life story against the backdrop of the changing ecology of Kotobuki, which Gill is quite deft in laying out…. As I see it, what both Gill—and Nishikawa—have to say about this is one of the main contributions of YokohamaStreet Life…. Geared to political economy in its emphasis on day-labor and welfare, and to the life-story mode of ethnography, the book is straightforward in being what it announces itself to be: the story of the life of Nishikawa Kimitsu told as ‘the precarious career of a Japanese day laborer’.
— Social Science Japan Journal
Gill's appreciation of, indeed affection for, Kimitsu comes across in almost every page.... [The text] retains the distinctiveness, and messiness, of a life on the margins, rendered through one of the more remarkable characters in memory.
— The Journal of Japanese Studies
This book is reminiscent of Maxim Gorky’s 1902 novel The Lower Depths, about a group of down-and-outs on the banks of the Volga, and of the 1956 film On the Bowery, about the New York skid row. It may surprise readers to find that prosperous Japanese cities also have such places, and even more so that they are home to men of learning. One such was Kimitsu, the subject of this book, whom I was privileged to meet on a visit with Tom Gill to the Yokohama ‘skid row’ in September 1994. In the course of that meeting Kimitsu grilled me on the 1938 Munich agreement, the 1956 Suez crisis, the music of Bartok and post-war European politics: a truly extraordinary character, wonderfully described in this book.
— Arthur Stockwin, University of Oxford
Tom Gill’s evocative descriptions give detail and depth to our often over-generalized view of the Japanese underclass. This book challenges our understanding about the lived experiences of individuals living in low-income areas, and privileges their views about their lives and on wider Japanese society and history. Kimitsu’s story vividly captures the atmosphere of the yoseba, which is one of isolation and connection, humor and sadness, and vital humanity.
— Carolyn S. Stevens, Monash University
Through his perseverance and good nature, Gill has succeeded in bringing to the surface the hidden potential and elegance of a stevedore’s thoughts and imagination that otherwise would have been forgotten or wasted. The conversations between the university scholar and the proletarian thinker have yielded a rich, and engaging book. Kimitsu's narratives provide not only raw and penetrating insights into the world of day laborers in Japan, but most importantly enlighten the reader about hidden aspects of Japanese culture and society. This book is a journey and discovery.
— Rey Ventura, author of Underground in Japan