Ageing bodies and Carceral Circuitry of 'Post-Welfare’ Japan

Seminarium

Datum: måndag 6 mars 2023

Tid: 13.00 – 14.30

Plats: B600

Jason Danely, Reader in Anthropology and Chair of the Healthy Ageing & Care Research Network at Oxford Brookes University joins us to talk about ageing.

Abstract

Over the last two decades, Japan's ageing population and widening social and economic inequalities have precipitated a sharp rise in the number of older adults living in precarious conditions of isolation and poverty. Within these circumstances of material and existential disconnection, alienation and weariness, crime and incarceration has become not only a means to survive, but also a way of recovering a sense of visibility, meaning, and care. As older bodies circulate between the prison and the community, custody and release, Japanese prisons have come to resemble old age homes, while care facilities and welfare bureaucracies in the community have incorporated techniques of surveillance and discipline indicative of the prison. In this talk, I argue that within this circuitous churn of older bodies, the carceral appears not as discrete institutional faces, but as a multiplicity of traces, repetitions and resonances across the circuit. These traces produce both a normalization of the incarcerated ageing body, as well as atmospheres of the carceral uncanny. Folded into this atmosphere are old age and death, both of which present another kind of uncanny repetition, as well as an engagement with history, memory, and grief. Drawing primarily on five-months of fieldwork with formerly incarcerated adults in the Tokyo Metropolitan Area, this talk will describe the lives of those who uneasily inhabit the uncanny terrain of the carceral, and the insights they can give us about ageing societies, dwelling and care in post-welfare states. 

Bio

Jason Danely is Reader in Anthropology and Chair of the Healthy Ageing & Care Research Network at Oxford Brookes University. He has led several international networks for the anthropology of aging, including the Association for Anthropology & Gerontology, the Age and Generations network of EASA, and the Commission on Aging and the Life Course (IUAES). Jason is the author of Aging and Loss: Mourning and Maturity in Japan (2014), and most recently, Fragile Resonance: Caring for Older Family Members in Japan and England (2022). He has also authored several articles and book chapters on various topics related to aging, ritual, dying and care, and has edited two collections, including Vulnerability and the Politics of Care (2021). Currently, he is writing a book on formerly incarcerated older adults in Japan.