The sacred and profane of Japan’s nuclear safety myth: On the cultural logic of framing and overflowing
Any policy requires a ‘frame’ and, by the same token, entails an ‘overflow’, externalizing a certain part of the world as irrelevant. This mundane business of policy framing and overflowing became an urgent matter of concern in Japan in March 2011, as the Fukushima nuclear disaster exposed how the e...
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-46652021-12-08T07:07:57Z The sacred and profane of Japan’s nuclear safety myth: On the cultural logic of framing and overflowing SAITO, Hiro Any policy requires a ‘frame’ and, by the same token, entails an ‘overflow’, externalizing a certain part of the world as irrelevant. This mundane business of policy framing and overflowing became an urgent matter of concern in Japan in March 2011, as the Fukushima nuclear disaster exposed how the existing frame of nuclear safety had permitted the fatal overflow of severe accident management. In fact, despite the creation of the new regulatory agency in September 2012, the post-Fukushima frame of nuclear safety continued to externalize off-site evacuation planning – a key component of severe accident management – until March 2015. To explain such persistence of the overflow, I borrow the concept of ‘sociotechnical imaginary’ from the policy-oriented strand of science and technology studies and infuse it with hermeneutical rigor of the strong program of cultural sociology. Specifically, I illustrate how the trajectory of Japan’s nuclear safety was decisively shaped by the pacifist imaginary and the safety myth, organized around the binary opposition ‘sacred = civilian use = safe vs. profane = military use = dangerous’, without reducing this deeper cultural logic of framing and overflowing to the political economy of nuclear energy or the global isomorphism of nuclear technology. 2021-12-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3408 info:doi/10.1177/17499755211001046 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4665/viewcontent/17499755211001046_with_cover_page_v2.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University cosmology Fukushima science and technology studies sociotechnical imaginary strong program Asian Studies Science and Technology Policy Science and Technology Studies |
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cosmology Fukushima science and technology studies sociotechnical imaginary strong program Asian Studies Science and Technology Policy Science and Technology Studies SAITO, Hiro The sacred and profane of Japan’s nuclear safety myth: On the cultural logic of framing and overflowing |
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Any policy requires a ‘frame’ and, by the same token, entails an ‘overflow’, externalizing a certain part of the world as irrelevant. This mundane business of policy framing and overflowing became an urgent matter of concern in Japan in March 2011, as the Fukushima nuclear disaster exposed how the existing frame of nuclear safety had permitted the fatal overflow of severe accident management. In fact, despite the creation of the new regulatory agency in September 2012, the post-Fukushima frame of nuclear safety continued to externalize off-site evacuation planning – a key component of severe accident management – until March 2015. To explain such persistence of the overflow, I borrow the concept of ‘sociotechnical imaginary’ from the policy-oriented strand of science and technology studies and infuse it with hermeneutical rigor of the strong program of cultural sociology. Specifically, I illustrate how the trajectory of Japan’s nuclear safety was decisively shaped by the pacifist imaginary and the safety myth, organized around the binary opposition ‘sacred = civilian use = safe vs. profane = military use = dangerous’, without reducing this deeper cultural logic of framing and overflowing to the political economy of nuclear energy or the global isomorphism of nuclear technology. |
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SAITO, Hiro |
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SAITO, Hiro |
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SAITO, Hiro |
title |
The sacred and profane of Japan’s nuclear safety myth: On the cultural logic of framing and overflowing |
title_short |
The sacred and profane of Japan’s nuclear safety myth: On the cultural logic of framing and overflowing |
title_full |
The sacred and profane of Japan’s nuclear safety myth: On the cultural logic of framing and overflowing |
title_fullStr |
The sacred and profane of Japan’s nuclear safety myth: On the cultural logic of framing and overflowing |
title_full_unstemmed |
The sacred and profane of Japan’s nuclear safety myth: On the cultural logic of framing and overflowing |
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sacred and profane of japan’s nuclear safety myth: on the cultural logic of framing and overflowing |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2021 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3408 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4665/viewcontent/17499755211001046_with_cover_page_v2.pdf |
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