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Estudios de Asia y África

versión On-line ISSN 2448-654Xversión impresa ISSN 0185-0164

Resumen

TELLO DIAZ, Lucía. Collectivism, Confucian ethics, tradition, and patriarchy in the era of kôreika shakai: Family institutions according to Yasujirô Ozu and Yôji Yamada. Estud. Asia Áfr. [online]. 2019, vol.54, n.3, pp.585-618. ISSN 2448-654X.  https://doi.org/10.24201/eaa.v54i3.2431.

Japan’s culture and idiosyncrasy have earned it a reputation as one of the most emblematic collectivist societies. Grounded in the moral precepts of Confucianism and traditional laws like the Meiji Civil Code (1868), customs such as patriarchy, deference towards old age, gender roles, filial piety, and respect for the first-born have defined the country’s intra-family relationships. Given Japan’s rapidly aging society, called kôreika shakai, these precepts have been transformed into the paradigm of individualism, as reflected in Japanese films. This research seeks to elucidate how the notion of the traditional family has evolved from Yasujirô Ozu’s Tokyo Story to Yôji Yamada’s versioned films Tokyo Family, What a Wonder-ful Family, What a Wonderful Family 2, and What a Wonderful Family 3. These films reveal how this new social model is portrayed and which elements have been modified over the years.

Palabras llave : Japanese cinema; collectivism; patriarchy; kôreika shakai; family; Yasujirô Ozu; Yôji Yamada.

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