Nightwork: Sexuality, Pleasure, and Corporate Masculinity in a Tokyo Hostess Club 1st Edition, Kindle Edition
by
Anne Allison
(Author)
Format: Kindle Edition
|
Anne Allison
(Author)
Find all the books, read about the author, and more.
See search results for this author
Are you an author?
Learn about Author Central
|
Flip to back
Flip to front
Audible Sample
Playing...
Paused
You are listening to a sample of the Audible narration for this Kindle book.
Learn more
Learn more
ISBN-13:
978-0226014876
ISBN-10:
0226014878
Why is ISBN important?
ISBN
Scan an ISBN with your phone
Use the Amazon App to scan ISBNs and compare prices.
This bar-code number lets you verify that you're getting exactly the right version or edition of a book. The 13-digit and 10-digit formats both work.
Use the Amazon App to scan ISBNs and compare prices.
Add to book club
Loading your book clubs
There was a problem loading your book clubs. Please try again.
Not in a club?
Learn more
Join or create book clubs
Choose books together
Track your books
Bring your club to Amazon Book Clubs, start a new book club and invite your friends to join, or find a club that’s right for you for free.
Buy
$15.12
eBook features:
Kindle e-Readers
Fire Tablets
Fire Phones
Sold by:
Amazon.com Services LLC
Digital List Price:
$28.00
Print List Price:
$28.00
Save $12.88 (46%)
International Women's Day
Stories of women who defy definition Listen now
Enter your mobile number or email address below and we'll send you a link to download the free Kindle App. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
-
Apple
-
Android
-
Windows Phone
-
Android
|
Download to your computer
|
Kindle Cloud Reader
|
Customers who bought this item also bought
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
Miss Bangkok: Memoirs of a Thai ProstituteKindle Edition
Sex Trafficking: Inside the Business of Modern SlaveryKindle Edition
Sex Work: Writings by Women in the Sex IndustryKindle Edition
People Who Eat Darkness: The True Story of a Young Woman Who Vanished from the Streets of Tokyo--and the Evil That Swallowed Her UpKindle Edition
Global Woman: Nannies, Maids, and Sex Workers in the New EconomyKindle Edition
Global Sex Workers: Rights, Resistance, and RedefinitionKamala KempadooKindle Edition
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
Amazon Business : For business-only pricing, quantity discounts and FREE Shipping. Register a free business account
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Japanese companies pay hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to hostess clubs that provide certain employees a release from job tensions. Here hostesses perform ritualized tasks--lighting cigarettes, pouring drinks, conversing in a stylized flirtatious manner--and while there is an erotic charge, the sex is implied, not performed. Duke University cultural anthropologist Allison's account of the four months she spent as a hostess at Bijo, a high-class Tokyo hostess club, is the first written description, in English or Japanese, devoted wholly to these after-work hangouts for corporate, white-collar sarariiman ("salaryman," an English/Japanese linguistic concoction). Allison has not written a voyeur's account, but a soundly researched study that provides substantial insights into the meanings of work and play for the Japanese. Whatever else they may do, the hostesses' first duty is to emphasize the client's strengths and his status as a desirable male, which, Allison argues, helps create the ideal sarariiman , one committed first and foremost to his job. Allison interviewed not only the hostesses and other Bijo staffers, but also wives of the men who frequent the club, club neophytes, managers of other hostess clubs, Japanese sociologists, journalists and others. Unlike previous books on Japanese nightlife, Allison's ethnography views Japanese night life from the eyes of a woman and feminist anthropologist. If the writing is occasionally dryly academic, Nightwork nonetheless provides valuable, thought-provoking reading for those interested in Japan, contemporary society or in gender roles.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Booklist
A fascinating look at the Japanese hostess club culture, where businessmen go to "feel like a man." The clubs are lavish or glitzy, depending on their quality and cost, but the focus is always the same for the men: to be entertained, cajoled, and flirted with by a young, attractive woman. Sex? Not necessarily. While flirting is open and expected, and intimate touching is not unknown, the purpose of these clubs is to offer an atmosphere where masculinity is "collectively realized and ritualized." Allison argues that this activity reinforces certain ideas of male dominance which so define the Japanese corporate world. Scholarly but never pedantic, the book is further bolstered by the author's own experience as a hostess. A penetrating look at a slice of Japanese business life. Brian McCombie
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Kirkus Reviews
An assistant professor in the Department of Cultural Anthropology at Duke University, Allison worked as a hostess in a Tokyo club, where she examined how the rituals of a hostess define gender identities in Japan. Allison combines feminism with Asian studies in her examination of night work. Japanese corporations bond their white- collar workers to the company with after-hours drinking sessions that employees are expected to attend--and their wives to allow. Allison partially criticizes her subjects, who justify these sessions as part of their culture. As she digs into their points of view, she tells us, ``My goal here is to lay out the cultural ideas that support corporate entertainment by framing and legitimizing it as cultural custom.'' As far as possible, she ``lets the voices of Japanese speak for themselves.'' Men often come to these bondings ``straight from work, tired, uptight, and insecure.'' As part of the corporate life, bonding is work, even though it is made to seem like nonwork. The hostess's job is to create a warm, pleasant atmosphere and lively discussion. Even so, she can also ``be insulted, ignored, and walked away from [and] `put in her place' by the men for whom she's lighting cigarettes, pouring drinks, and instigating conversation. She is lectured, her appearance is evaluated and criticized, her body is ogled and pawed....'' Allison describes the Japanese take on the meaning and place of work; the family and home; male play with money, women, and sex; male rituals of masculinity; and the ways in which white-collar workers are impotent. After retirement, deprived of the money for expensive booze and hostesses, the poor male finds himself in a reverse role, ruled by the absolute master of domestic space, his wife. Serious anthropology but also much like a long night out, expenses paid. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
About the Author
Anne Allison is the Robert O. Keohane Professor of Cultural Anthropology and Professor of Women's Studies at Duke University.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Product details
- ASIN : B00GD6GK0O
- Publisher : University of Chicago Press; 1st edition (February 25, 2009)
- Publication date : February 25, 2009
- Language : English
- File size : 795 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 228 pages
- Lending : Enabled
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#534,876 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #231 in Social Customs & Traditions
- #293 in Regional Geography
- #982 in Customs & Traditions Social Sciences
- Customer Reviews:
Products related to this item
Page 1 of 1Start overPage 1 of 1
Customer reviews
4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
14 global ratings
How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2020
Report abuse
Verified Purchase
Definitely a new perspective and I learned a lot!
Helpful
Reviewed in the United States on December 26, 2014
Verified Purchase
Okay book
Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2019
Not much has changed in Japan.
For centuries the samurai class - a small percentage of the population - enjoyed the same 'privilege' as described here, having women on the side. Today's white collar workers go through an updated torture test for entry (the education system) in order to play. It's institutionalized, as in the past, such that women basically support it either explicitly or by willfully ignoring it, as part and parcel of Japan, Inc.
This treatise tries to get to the bottom of this more or less Asian phenomenon, but I think it over-intellectualizes the whole thing. My take . . . men are dogs, everywhere. They marry, as custom dictates, and if they are able they get sex on the side, they will. Western prohibitions, namely religion, against this type of thing keep it from being in any way sanctioned. Not so in Japan and, I think, in most of East Asian countries where they have a different view of the family, sex, and shame/guilt.
In Asia, until quite recently, men having multiple concubines - if he could support them - was accepted. Old habits die hard.
For centuries the samurai class - a small percentage of the population - enjoyed the same 'privilege' as described here, having women on the side. Today's white collar workers go through an updated torture test for entry (the education system) in order to play. It's institutionalized, as in the past, such that women basically support it either explicitly or by willfully ignoring it, as part and parcel of Japan, Inc.
This treatise tries to get to the bottom of this more or less Asian phenomenon, but I think it over-intellectualizes the whole thing. My take . . . men are dogs, everywhere. They marry, as custom dictates, and if they are able they get sex on the side, they will. Western prohibitions, namely religion, against this type of thing keep it from being in any way sanctioned. Not so in Japan and, I think, in most of East Asian countries where they have a different view of the family, sex, and shame/guilt.
In Asia, until quite recently, men having multiple concubines - if he could support them - was accepted. Old habits die hard.
2 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2006
For many years, Japan's hardworking salarymen (men working in middle and large size companies engaged in various businesses) have repaired to special clubs after hours to drink and be entertained by women of a demi-monde. Geishas worked in this way in their day, but now, the traditional aspects of Japanese culture that were personified in the geisha are outmoded. The salarymen want ( or at least get) a more modern style woman. What goes on in such clubs ? What is the relationship of businesses to the clubs ? How do such clubs fit into the overall picture of Japanese culture ? Anne Allison became a hostess in one club for some months back in the 1980s. She didn't hide the fact that she was an anthropologist, but was accepted as a hostess anyway. The result is this most interesting and well-written book which answers all three questions very ably. Not only is the description of the research engrossing, but the author contests or agrees with the views of Japanese sociologists very capably. It is a very good idea to discuss what Japanese intellectuals think about hostess clubs, though most such people disparaged her research plan and thought that she would learn nothing. People like myself, who have not read such Japanese academics as Aida, Tada, Minami, Nakane, Ishikawa, Wagatsuma, or Yoda, but are interested in their arguments, will find the subsequent discussion most fascinating. Allison also weaves in some arguments from such theoreticians as Barthes and Lacan, but does not engage in the jargon which mars their work.
Hostess clubs, while seeming an innocuous, if titillating part of Japanese culture, turn out to be a nexus where attitudes and expectations about work, play, sex, gender roles, identity and money come together. The ethnographic descriptions of behavior and conversations in the club make fascinating reading. By making `play' an extension of `work', by cutting the salarymen off from family life, the companies, she says, are able to maximize the work they get from their employees. She challenges the naturalness of working late at night by `playing' at a club, though Japanese sociologists claim that it IS natural because Japanese think of themselves as forever part of a group, especially the work group. Paying hundreds or thousands of dollars for short periods of drinking and mostly insubstantial chat with hostesses, Japanese companies believe that their business deals are enhanced and that human relations among bosses and workers are improved. Allison argues that in addition hostess clubs function as a place where men's egos (but nothing else) are massaged by the attentive, flattering behavior of the hostesses. She explores the relationship of Japanese salarymen with mothers and wives and concludes that "whatever men say they need, think they're doing, and justify as necessary `for work' in the demi-monde is effected symbolically and ritualistically through women and the sexuality they represent"; the sexuality they almost never exercise in fact.
This is an ethnography of modern Japan, far removed from Embree's "Suye Mura" or Beardsley, Hall and Ward's "Village Japan"---the ethnographies of yesteryear. If you are teaching a course on Japanese culture or society, if you're a graduate student in Japanese studies, or if you are interested in gender and role formation in any society, this book is a must, so well-organized and clearly-written.
Hostess clubs, while seeming an innocuous, if titillating part of Japanese culture, turn out to be a nexus where attitudes and expectations about work, play, sex, gender roles, identity and money come together. The ethnographic descriptions of behavior and conversations in the club make fascinating reading. By making `play' an extension of `work', by cutting the salarymen off from family life, the companies, she says, are able to maximize the work they get from their employees. She challenges the naturalness of working late at night by `playing' at a club, though Japanese sociologists claim that it IS natural because Japanese think of themselves as forever part of a group, especially the work group. Paying hundreds or thousands of dollars for short periods of drinking and mostly insubstantial chat with hostesses, Japanese companies believe that their business deals are enhanced and that human relations among bosses and workers are improved. Allison argues that in addition hostess clubs function as a place where men's egos (but nothing else) are massaged by the attentive, flattering behavior of the hostesses. She explores the relationship of Japanese salarymen with mothers and wives and concludes that "whatever men say they need, think they're doing, and justify as necessary `for work' in the demi-monde is effected symbolically and ritualistically through women and the sexuality they represent"; the sexuality they almost never exercise in fact.
This is an ethnography of modern Japan, far removed from Embree's "Suye Mura" or Beardsley, Hall and Ward's "Village Japan"---the ethnographies of yesteryear. If you are teaching a course on Japanese culture or society, if you're a graduate student in Japanese studies, or if you are interested in gender and role formation in any society, this book is a must, so well-organized and clearly-written.
14 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2003
I read this book during research for an anthropology paper on women's labor in Japan, and was very un-impressed for the following reasons:
1)The description of the role of hostess clubs is not particularly accurate. Having been dragged to hostess clubs by Japanese (and American) colleagues, I know that Allison's attempt to generalize based on her experiences is deceptive. (I am not defending the hostess club- I did not think much of the establishments I attended.)
2) Allison remarkably seems to pretend in her writing that the fact that she was a western anthropology student in a previously all-Japanese club (before Westerners became common in hostess bars) did not affect the club, or the validity of her observations.
3) Much of the theorizing in the book is downright demeaning to the Japanese, suggesting that they engage only in play to simulate work, or that many marriages are simply a wife replacing the mother.
I don't think this book has aged well, and I think there are much better starting points for learning about Japan, Japanese sexuality, or the sex industry in Japan.
1)The description of the role of hostess clubs is not particularly accurate. Having been dragged to hostess clubs by Japanese (and American) colleagues, I know that Allison's attempt to generalize based on her experiences is deceptive. (I am not defending the hostess club- I did not think much of the establishments I attended.)
2) Allison remarkably seems to pretend in her writing that the fact that she was a western anthropology student in a previously all-Japanese club (before Westerners became common in hostess bars) did not affect the club, or the validity of her observations.
3) Much of the theorizing in the book is downright demeaning to the Japanese, suggesting that they engage only in play to simulate work, or that many marriages are simply a wife replacing the mother.
I don't think this book has aged well, and I think there are much better starting points for learning about Japan, Japanese sexuality, or the sex industry in Japan.
36 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on October 3, 2001
This book offered me a unique glimpse into the inner workings of hostess clubs. To know that the wives of these men choose to ignore what is going on is shocking to me, but of course I am a westerner, so I can't totally understand. Do you want to know what "No-Pan Kissa" is? Warning: I'm about to spout a cliche; READ THE BOOK. It's a remarkable piece of work.
8 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2007
The book does a great job showing the ways that Japanese businessmen spend their time. The greatest aspect of this book is it's intimacy. Allison unpacks what is truly taking place in these hostess clubs-corporate masculinity, fascinating relationships, and complex gender roles. The book is a "must read" and I would recommend it to anyone who enjoys reading rich ethnographic work.
3 people found this helpful
Report abuse
What other items do customers buy after viewing this item?
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
Products related to this item
Page 1 of 1Start overPage 1 of 1
There's a problem loading this menu right now.
Get free delivery with Amazon Prime
Prime members enjoy FREE Delivery and exclusive access to music, movies, TV shows, original audio series, and Kindle books.
