Sign in or register
for additional privileges

East Asian Youth Cultures Spring 2015

Globalized Identities, Localized Practices, and Social Transitions

Dwayne Dixon, Author

You appear to be using an older verion of Internet Explorer. For the best experience please upgrade your IE version or switch to a another web browser.

Contextualizing Hip-Hop in Japan and Its Role in Youth Culture

To explain why hip-hop’s influence exists in Japan, I first explain the state of Japan before the hip-hop phenomenon and how that state affected youth. In Japan, a combination of the socio-economic situation and Japan’s family life presented a state of youth that was similar to the situation that allowed hip-hop to first flourish in the African-American community. As Mark Driscoll (2007) explains, starting in the early 1990’s, Japan’s economic reality began to crumble: the nation’s population was rapidly declining as baby boomers were growing older and older, debt was becoming staggeringly high, and the number of sexually transmitted diseases were growing at an alarming rate. Because Japan began to enter a recession, a previously booming economy turned into a dire reality for Japanese adolescents born during the 1980’s. The worsening economic reality made it difficult for Japanese youth to attain jobs, shattering the notion that a good education guaranteed a stable job. In addition to the difficulty of getting jobs, the Japanese adults who did have jobs had to devote all of their time to those jobs, meaning a sacrifice in time spent nurturing their children. This lack of parental care for the Japanese youth along with the shattering of the idea of a stable career path led many Japanese youth to a disillusionment of sorts, bitter at an unfulfilled promise for a stable life and lacking in love, attention, and a sense of family.

At the same time as this recession is occurring, there is a notable shift in ideological values as well. Driscoll (2007) states that around this time is when the freeter (un- and underemployed Japanese people) culture began to rise. As future career prospects looked bleak, many Japanese young adults yearned for a more carefree, happier lifestyle, leading to many youths opting out of the traditional career path. What is interesting to note, however, is that the introduction and rise of the hip-hop culture began around the same time as this ideological shift occurred, having gained recognition in the early 1990’s. A prime example of this is the rise of the ganguro phenomenon, which was a new fashion style that imitated blackened faces, bright clothes, and hip-hop accessories, amongst Japanese teenage girls. The ganguro trend rose out of hip-hop influence as a sort of tribute to the African-American culture from which hip-hop came. To the girls who dressed in ganguro, the new fashion style was a way of expressing and redefining their individual identity as well as a way of stating their desire for a carefree life rather than boring, mundane one. However, to Japanese society, ganguro was in conflict with traditional society’s ideals, as the Japanese public viewed ganguro girls as “creatures” that represented the negative aspects of society (Liu, 2005).


The main point to note here, however, is that freeters were viewed in essentially the same way the ganguro girls were viewed. Interestingly enough, the ideological values of the freeter culture align in certain ways with the ideological values of the hip-hop movement. Just as oppressed African-Americans used hip-hop to express discontent with the current state of society during the 1970’s, Japanese artists used hip-hop to represent the discontent of the youth with the government and its society (Liu, 2012). What this means is that this feeling of isolation on the part of Japanese youth and the freeter culture towards society allowed a cultural movement like hip-hop, a movement that derives its popularity and origins from a sense of oppression, to rise. Thus, while there is no definitive, explicit evidence that the freeter culture caused the growth of hip-hop in Japan, there is definitely a link between the two movements, as they share a similar ideology, both born out of Japan’s declining economy.

Sources:

Driscoll, M. (2007). Debt and denunciation in post-bubble japan: on the two freeters. Cultural Critique, 65, 164-187.

Liu, X. (2005) The hip hop impact on japanese youth culture. Southeast Review of Asian Studies, 32, 145-153.

Liu, X. (2012) Hip hop's global influence and its localization in japan and china. Virginia Review of Asian Studies, 147-160.

Comment on this page
 

Discussion of "Contextualizing Hip-Hop in Japan and Its Role in Youth Culture"

Add your voice to this discussion.

Checking your signed in status ...

Previous page on path Glocalization of Hip-Hop within East Asia, page 3 of 7 Next page on path

Related:  Japanese Hostess and Host ClubsThe Glocalization and Hybridity of AnimeGlobalization & Neo-liberal Commodification of Youth IdentityBurden of the IndividualThe Normalization/Homogenization of an 'Ideal' Beauty Standard: Capitalist Strategy & GlobalizationHybridity in the Fourth Space: Video Games and the Global Youth ImaginaryAlex BubenMasqueraders and Empty Vessels: Barriers to Hybridity in Popular Korean MusicEducation in Taiwan: Set for FailureGlocalization of Hip-Hop within East AsiaHistory of the Chinese Hukou System and Migrant WorkersCase Study: The Use of Dialect in the Rise of the Cantonese Hip-Hop SceneA Brief History on Hip-HopThe Freeter: 汚い、危険、きつい.Globalization in relation to Glocalization in East AsiaWhat Does Precarious Labor Actually Look Like?Hip-Hop's Role in Chinese Youth CultureDelinquent Girls and Capitalist ConsumptionJoshi Kosei BusinessesThe Gendered Impact of Neoliberalism and the Patriarchy in JapanJapanese Fashion: Reclaiming the cultural production of femininitySex Work in Japan: Precarity, Risk, Empowerment?Elena KimDialetics of Global Culture and AuthenticityJapan's Recession: Blaming the VictimCommodification of the Intellectual on Neoliberal Youth DevelopmentHybridity, Localization, and the Global Youth Imaginary of MediaThe Cosmetic Surgery Phenomenon in South Korea: Women, Youth and Capitalist ConsumptionCultural Dictation: Center-Periphery Media and LocalizationIntersection of Neoliberalism and Precarious LaborCultural Harmonies: Successes and Failures of Musical Hybridity through International CollaborationHuman Trafficking and J-Pop IdolsPrecarious RelationshipsUtilization of Social Capital by Precarious YouthPrecarious WorkOffline Third Spaces: Anime Conventions as Sites of DesireMechanized Bodies: Modernization and the Hybridity of the Techno-Orient in Japanese AnimeEducation and its Effects on the Development of East Asian Youth CultureSuicide in East Asia