Description

Book Synopsis
Homelessness has been recognized as a serious problem in Japan since the 1990s, but the dominant model of a "homeless person" has been that of an unemployed male labourer - a model that has largely excluded women, who experience homelessness in different forms.

This study gives the homeless women of Japan a voice at last. Based on extensive fieldwork, the author paints a vivid picture of the unique experiences of homeless women living in a diverse range of environments. By introducing a gender perspective to the analytic framework and challenging the conception of the homeless individual as a rational, autonomous subject, the author invites a critical reconsideration of homeless studies and of public policy.

Table of Contents
  • Figures
  • Tables
  • Photos
  • Foreword to the English-Language Edition
  • Foreword to the Original Edition
  • 1 Toward an ethnography of homeless women
  • 2 Who are the homeless women?
  • 3 Establishing welfare for homeless women
  • 4 Gender norms and the use of welfare facilities
  • 5 The world of women who sleep rough
  • 6 Continuing and ending rough sleeping
  • 7 The process of change
  • 8 Resisting the spell of the autonomous subject
  • Epilogue
  • Afterword
  • Notes
  • References
  • Name Index
  • Subject Index

Living on the Streets in Japan: Homeless Women Break their Silence

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    A Paperback by Satomi Maruyama, Stephen Filler

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      View other formats and editions of Living on the Streets in Japan: Homeless Women Break their Silence by Satomi Maruyama

      Publisher: Kyoto University Press and Trans Pacific Press
      Publication Date: 30/07/2021
      ISBN13: 9781920901745, 978-1920901745
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Homelessness has been recognized as a serious problem in Japan since the 1990s, but the dominant model of a "homeless person" has been that of an unemployed male labourer - a model that has largely excluded women, who experience homelessness in different forms.

      This study gives the homeless women of Japan a voice at last. Based on extensive fieldwork, the author paints a vivid picture of the unique experiences of homeless women living in a diverse range of environments. By introducing a gender perspective to the analytic framework and challenging the conception of the homeless individual as a rational, autonomous subject, the author invites a critical reconsideration of homeless studies and of public policy.

      Table of Contents
      • Figures
      • Tables
      • Photos
      • Foreword to the English-Language Edition
      • Foreword to the Original Edition
      • 1 Toward an ethnography of homeless women
      • 2 Who are the homeless women?
      • 3 Establishing welfare for homeless women
      • 4 Gender norms and the use of welfare facilities
      • 5 The world of women who sleep rough
      • 6 Continuing and ending rough sleeping
      • 7 The process of change
      • 8 Resisting the spell of the autonomous subject
      • Epilogue
      • Afterword
      • Notes
      • References
      • Name Index
      • Subject Index

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