Emplotting Hikikomori: Japanese Parents’ Narratives of Social Withdrawal

被引:0
作者
Ellen Rubinstein
机构
[1] Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School,Department of Family Medicine and Community Health
来源
Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry | 2016年 / 40卷
关键词
Narrative; Hope; Psychiatry; Hikikomori; Social withdrawal; Japan;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Hikikomori, often glossed as “social withdrawal,” emerged as a sociomedical condition among Japanese youth at the end of the twentieth century, and it continues to fascinate and concern the public. Explanatory frameworks for hikikomori abound, with different stakeholders attributing it to individual psychopathology, poor parenting, and/or a lack of social support structures. This article takes an interpretive approach to hikikomori by exploring parents’ narrative constructions of hikikomori children in support group meetings and in-depth interviews. I argue that some parents were able to find hope in hikikomori by ‘emplotting’ their children’s experiences into a larger narrative about onset, withdrawal, and recovery, which helped them remain invested in the present by maintaining a sense of possibility about the future. Contrary to literature that examines hikikomori as an epidemic of isolated individuals, I demonstrate how parents play a key role in hikikomori through meaning-making activities that have the potential to shape their children’s experiences of withdrawal.
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页码:641 / 663
页数:22
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