Abstract

In contrast to media images of lonely deaths, stereotypes of Japanese calm acceptance of dying, and the “naturalness” of dependency in old age or illness, this paper explores the complex ways that changing perceptions of time refocus people on the question of how to live. Time both narrows to the level of medication schedules and bodily functions, and expands to more immediate engagement with others in the past and future. The idea of a moral timeline of such changes builds on recent work in the anthropology of morality by recognizing these shifts in the ideas and actions people take to retain agency through suffering. People near the end of life in Japan commonly employ cultural idioms of effort, reciprocity, and gratitude to express their continued striving to be moral persons in a social world. Ultimately such efforts determine not only how they see themselves and are seen by others through their final days, but whether theirs will be judged to be a “good death,” and thus the nature of the person’s continued social existence in spirit and memories after death. Ethnographic data on which this article is based come from a participant-observation study of adults of all ages with life-threatening illnesses and from an interview study of frail elderly and their family caregivers in the late 20th and early 21st century in urban and rural settings.

Highlights

  • Recent attention to “lonely deaths” in Japan has raised disturbing questions about the nature of a society in which old people die alone, having no human relationships and no one who cares

  • There is no official number of lonely deaths nationally; the estimates I have found range from “several thousand” (Onishi 2017) to 40,000 (Japan News 2017)

  • Drawing on the words of frail elderly and terminally ill people, I have offered a picture of dying in contemporary Japan that contrasts with that of a hopeless, lonely death

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Recent attention to “lonely deaths” in Japan has raised disturbing questions about the nature of a society in which old people die alone, having no human relationships and no one who cares. As I explore some of the widely available cultural resources in which their responses were framed, we see not the premature social death of the person, but rather the continued search for meaning as they attempt to live a moral life in their remaining time

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call