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Type of Document Master's Thesis
Author Krysinska, Dorota
URN etd-10272006-180946
Title Hikikomori (Social Withdrawal) in Japan: Discourses of Media and Scholars; Multicausal Explanations of the Phenomenon.
Degree Master of Arts
Program East Asian Studies
School School of Arts and Sciences
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Dr. Akiko Hashimoto, Associate Professor, Sociology Committee Chair
Dr. Brenda G. Jordan, Adjunct Assistant Professor, History of Art and Architecture Committee Member
Dr. Keiko McDonald, Professor, East Asian Languages and Literatures Committee Member
Keywords
  • generalization in media
  • mute resistance
  • passive resistance
  • causal linkage
  • conformity
  • multi-causal explanation
  • compliance
  • conflict management
  • causal relationship
  • parent-child communication
  • educational pressure
  • bullying
  • social pressure
  • scholar
  • parent
  • ijime
  • surveillance
  • seken
  • hikikomori
  • amae
  • seclusion
  • social withdrawal
  • conflict resolution
  • futoko
  • tokokyohi
  • society
  • media
  • psychiatric disorder
  • discourse
  • Japan
  • psychiatric illness
  • sensationalism in media
  • school refusal
  • exaggeration in media
  • parent-child interdependence
  • school
  • multicausal explanation
Date of Defense 2006-10-19
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
Hikikomori, a phenomenon which exists to date mostly in Japan, are people who seclude themselves in their bedrooms for an extended period of time and reject most forms of contact with the outside world. These are usually males and young people in their twenties who may comprise nearly a million Japanese citizens.

Since Japanese and foreign media as well as scholars express different opinions on potential causes of hikikomori, one of the focal points of my work is to show that causal explanations of the phenomenon, especially those involving multiple causes, that are provided by different authors are not in conflict. I do so by arguing that social withdrawal may be a consequence of each cause on its own, but also the result of interactions between them. To demonstrate it, I analyze discourses of media and scholars and show linkages between the three most salient causes of hikikomori: conformity to Japanese society, the pressure of the educational system, and a problem of communication between parents and children. These factors represent the three distinct categories of my analysis – Society, School and Parents.

The second issue I address in my work is hikikomori as a form of resistance against the social order in Japan. My study shows that social withdrawal does not have to be an extreme form of behavioral deviation as such, but rather that it could be perceived as a radical manifestation of resistance in the society of Japan originating from within Japanese culture. This argument explains why hikikomori do not decide to choose an active form of resistance.

Through a cross-category discussion, the thesis is one of the first to expound on interrelations of hikikomori causes originating from different spheres of life, such as society, school and parents. Moreover, the work elaborately explains the correlations between causes which makes it distinct from other authors’ publications. My study is also one of the first summaries of all potential factors mentioned by media and scholars that result in the problem of hikikomori, which will supply a better understanding of the phenomenon in the English language literature.

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