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The COVID-19 Pandemic and Japans Anxiety-Suppression Society: Anxiety, Self-Restraint, and Solidarity in a Disaster Community

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Authors

PARK Seung-hyun

Issue Date
2022-10-31
Publisher
Institute for Japanese Studies, Seoul National University
Citation
Seoul Journal of Japanese Studies, Vol.8 No.1, pp. 27-53
Keywords
COVID-19disasterpandemic containmentanxietyself-restraintsolidarity2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics
Abstract
In this article, I analyze the Japanese governments response and public discourse during the early part of the COVID-19 pandemic, a period covering the onset of the pandemic, the declaration of a state of emergency, and the decline in the second wave of infections by mid-October 2020. Assessing that the virus was highly contagious but not particularly fatal, the Japanese government adopted a policy focusing on the prevention of large-scale clusters of infections and treatment of severe cases, calling for the public to practice of self-restraint in avoiding the three Cs of closed spaces, concentrations of people, and close contact. The goal of this measure was to minimize the pandemics socioeconomic impact and sustain the health care system. It was successful in terms of infection and fatality rates. Particularly after the state of emergency was lifted on April 7, Japan began to garner global attention as a model for containing the pandemic without coercion. Behind Prime Minister Abes resignation, however, lay the failure of Japans COVID-19 response. The Japanese people lost faith in the governments response owing to its perceived harm to publicness, as symbolized in the Abe-no-mask incident. Japanese society is a disaster community, sharing in the anxiety over the experiences and memories of disasters occurring over the past twenty-five years, including the Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake in 1995 and Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011. Japan has thus experienced COVID-19 as a part of a greater, more complex chain of disasters. The response to COVID-19 in the form of the request for self-restraint was also rooted in such communal solidarity. Controversy over PCR testing policies or optimistic government perceptions pertaining to COVID-19 evince the present state of the disaster-nation that is Japan as it endeavors to suppress anxiety and maintain daily life as usual. I conceptualize Japanese society in this situation as an anxiety-suppression society.
ISSN
2384-2849
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/187107
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