Description

Book Synopsis

This book examines the struggles of those suffering from Minimata disease, eponymous with the Japanese city in which a Chisso factory released methylmercury into the Shiranui Sea, leading to widespread poisonings. Yuki Miyamoto explores Minimata sufferers’ struggles, examining their physical pains as well as the emotional plight of having lost their loved ones, their livelihood, and fellowship in communities, to the illness. Miyamoto’s analysis focuses on the philosophies and actions of a group, Hongan no kai, comprised of Minamata disease sufferers and their supporters in 1994. Relying on the group’s newsletter, “Tamashii utsure,” (Transferring the spirit), this monograph explores the ways in which Hongan no kai members have come to terms with their experiences as well as their visions of “a world otherwise” (janaka shaba), where ontology, epistemology, and worldviews are construed differently from those of this modern world.



Trade Review

This important book investigates how religious worldviews influence survivors' views of industrial pollution at Minamata, one of Japan's best known cases of methylmercury contamination. Through interviews with members of the group Hongan no kai (Association of the Original Vow) and deep readings of their publications, Miyamoto integrates the voices, thoughts, and actions of those who have suffered because of Japan's industrial growth and social discrimination. Observers familiar with the ongoing disaster at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plants and the resulting radioactive contamination will see many grim parallels here.

-- Daniel P. Aldrich, Northeastern University; author of Black Wave, Building Resilience, and Site Fights

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Janaka Shaba or A World Otherwise

Chapter 2: Modernization, Mercury, and Minamata

Chapter 3: The World of the Minamata Fishers: Forgiveness, Gift (nosari), and the Sugimoto Family

Chapter 4: Before Good and Evil: Ogata Masato on Spirit/Tamashii

Chapter 5: Literature of Dystopia: Ishimure Michiko and the Fragile Power of the Precariousness

Chapter 6: Genius Loci and the Discourse of Home

Chapter 7: Hongan no Kai and Spiritual Praxis as an Environmental Ethics

A World Otherwise: Environmental Praxis in

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Tue 23 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Yuki Miyamoto

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      View other formats and editions of A World Otherwise: Environmental Praxis in by Yuki Miyamoto

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 17/02/2021
      ISBN13: 9781793643605, 978-1793643605
      ISBN10: 1793643601

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book examines the struggles of those suffering from Minimata disease, eponymous with the Japanese city in which a Chisso factory released methylmercury into the Shiranui Sea, leading to widespread poisonings. Yuki Miyamoto explores Minimata sufferers’ struggles, examining their physical pains as well as the emotional plight of having lost their loved ones, their livelihood, and fellowship in communities, to the illness. Miyamoto’s analysis focuses on the philosophies and actions of a group, Hongan no kai, comprised of Minamata disease sufferers and their supporters in 1994. Relying on the group’s newsletter, “Tamashii utsure,” (Transferring the spirit), this monograph explores the ways in which Hongan no kai members have come to terms with their experiences as well as their visions of “a world otherwise” (janaka shaba), where ontology, epistemology, and worldviews are construed differently from those of this modern world.



      Trade Review

      This important book investigates how religious worldviews influence survivors' views of industrial pollution at Minamata, one of Japan's best known cases of methylmercury contamination. Through interviews with members of the group Hongan no kai (Association of the Original Vow) and deep readings of their publications, Miyamoto integrates the voices, thoughts, and actions of those who have suffered because of Japan's industrial growth and social discrimination. Observers familiar with the ongoing disaster at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plants and the resulting radioactive contamination will see many grim parallels here.

      -- Daniel P. Aldrich, Northeastern University; author of Black Wave, Building Resilience, and Site Fights

      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1: Janaka Shaba or A World Otherwise

      Chapter 2: Modernization, Mercury, and Minamata

      Chapter 3: The World of the Minamata Fishers: Forgiveness, Gift (nosari), and the Sugimoto Family

      Chapter 4: Before Good and Evil: Ogata Masato on Spirit/Tamashii

      Chapter 5: Literature of Dystopia: Ishimure Michiko and the Fragile Power of the Precariousness

      Chapter 6: Genius Loci and the Discourse of Home

      Chapter 7: Hongan no Kai and Spiritual Praxis as an Environmental Ethics

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