3月
13
2015

【要旨】(英文)
In 2014, the Japanese government passed a revision of the Labor Safety Hygiene Law and institutionalized « stress checks » for all workers across the nation. This mental health screening has been installed as a response to the increasing number of depressed and suicidal workers in a country plagued by recession since the 1990s. The screening is also prompted by a successful grassroots movement that has helped establish state and corporate responsibilities for protecting workers’ mental health. These changes have initiated a web of corporate surveillance, generating a new realm of workers’ self-knowledge for those who had never scrutinized themselves in a psychiatrized way. Notably, while the pressure on workers for self-disclosure—and to cultivate their resilience—increases, new therapeutic spaces have emerged, where psychiatrists and workers are exploring new forms of silence and ways of retaining a sense of a secret self. By investigating the rise of depression as a workplace psychopathology and emerging forms of care of the self, this talk asks what happens to people’s subjectivities when their minds and bodies become the repository of valuable secrets.

【プロフィール】(英文)
Junko Kitanaka is a medical anthropologist and associate professor in the Department of Human Sciences, Keio University, Tokyo. For her McGill University doctoral dissertation on depression, she received a number of awards including the 2007 Dissertation Award from the American Anthropological Association’s Society for Medical Anthropology. This has since been published by Princeton University Press as a book titled Depression in Japan: Psychiatric Cures for a Society in Distress, which won the American Anthropological Association’s Francis Hsu Prize for Best Book in East Asian Anthropology in 2013. She is currently working on a new project on dementia and the psychiatrization of the life cycle.

【司会】 ジャン=ミッシェル・ビュテル(日仏会館・日本研究センター)

【主催】 日仏会館フランス事務所
【共催】 在日フランス商工会議所

* 日仏会館フランス国立日本研究所主催の催しは特に記載のない限り、一般公開・入場無料ですが、参加にはホームページからの申込みが必須となります。

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