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E-raamat: Tenkin and Career Management in a Changing Japan

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Sep-2024
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781793604385
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Sep-2024
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781793604385

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Tenkin, or corporate transfers in the Japanese contexts, is a mandated practice. Workers have little discretion. If workers are dual-career couples with small children, how do they manage it? Tenkin and Career Management in a Changing Japan answers this question through qualitative interviews with human resource department managers in large firms and married, white-collar workers, and participant observation in social events. The research uncovered that the culturally normative, gendered nature of tenkin is produced and reproduced by Japanese firms’ capitalists’ logic and gendered family assumptions, while some firms attempted to advance diversification and inclusion, and the dual-career couples are also becoming the actors of tenkin through negotiation. The author discusses these dual-career couples’ agency (Ortner 2006) and argues that for structural change to happen in Japan, the essential concept of care should count in the discussion of career management for all workers.



Drawing on the rich, qualitative-interview-based data from Japanese firms and dual-career workers, the author discusses Tenkin, cultural and gendered corporate transfers, workers’ agency, and argues the need to incorporate the concept of care in career management.

Arvustused

This is the first thorough study of one of the key practices in the Japanese corporate world. Large companies move their employees through regular, required job transfers, and Fujita, with rich ethnographic interviewing and shrewd analysis, shows its profound effects, especially on womens efforts to balance work demands and life aspirations. A major contribution to Japan studies and business anthropology. -- William Kelly, Yale University

Muu info

Drawing on the rich, qualitative-interview-based data from Japanese firms and dual-career workers, the author discusses Tenkin, cultural and gendered corporate transfers, workers agency, and argues the need to incorporate the concept of care in career management.

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Tenkin as the Subject

Chapter 1: The Practice Taken for Granted

Chapter 2: Development and Changes in the Practice?

Chapter 3: Young Workers and Salariiman

Chapter 4: Dual-career Couples Living Apart

Chapter 5: Dual-career Couples Collaborating

Conclusion: Career Management in Contemporary Japan

Appendix A: The Firms Interviewed by the Author

Appendix B: The Individuals Interviewed by the Author

Bibliography

About the Author

Noriko Fujita is assistant professor in the College for Humanities at Tamagawa University.