Yokohama Street Life

The Precarious Career of a Japanese Day Laborer

By (author) Tom Gill

Publication date:

06 March 2015

Length of book:

162 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

ISBN-13: 9781498511988

Yokohama Street Life: The Precarious Career of a Japanese Day Laborer is a one-man ethnography, tracing the career of a single Japanese day laborer called Kimitsu, from his wartime childhood in the southern island of Kyushu through a brief military career to a lifetime spent working on the docks and construction sites of Tokyo, Osaka and Yokohama. Kimitsu emerges as a unique voice from the Japanese ghetto, a self-educated philosopher whose thoughts on life in the slums, on post-war Japanese society and on more abstract intellectual concerns are conveyed in a series of conversations with British anthropologist Tom Gill, whose friendship with Kimitsu spans more than two decades. For Kimitsu, as for many of his fellow day laborers at the bottom of Japanese society, offers none of the comforting distractions of marriage, family life, or a long-term career in a settled workplace. It leads him through existential philosophy towards Buddhist mysticism as he fills the time between days of hard manual labor with visits to second-hand bookshops in search of enlightenment.

The book also portrays Kimitsu’s living environment, a Yokohama slum district called Kotobuki. Kotobuki is a ‘doya-gai’—a slum inhabited mainly by men, somewhat similar to the skid row districts that used to be common in American cities. Traditionally these men have earned a basic living by working as day laborers, but the decline in employment opportunities has forced many of them into welfare dependence or homelessness. Kimitsu’s life and thought are framed by an account of the changing way of life in Kotobuki, a place that has gradually been transformed from a casual laboring market to a large, shambolical welfare center. In Kotobuki the national Japanese issues of an aging workforce and economic decline set in much earlier than elsewhere, leading to a dramatic illustration of the challenges facing the Japanese welfare state.
[T]he book is unconventional and defies easy categorization; it is a book about one person, set within a shifting landscape of labor relations in Japan. It is not exactly a case study and has an objective that is both modest and grand—to see in the life history of Nishikawa a ‘great big library’…. [W]here I found myself most pulled in—and how I think this book will be most useful for scholars of Japan and informal/precarious labor—is when reading Kimitsu’s life story against the backdrop of the changing ecology of Kotobuki, which Gill is quite deft in laying out…. As I see it, what both Gill—and Nishikawa—have to say about this is one of the main contributions of YokohamaStreet Life…. Geared to political economy in its emphasis on day-labor and welfare, and to the life-story mode of ethnography, the book is straightforward in being what it announces itself to be: the story of the life of Nishikawa Kimitsu told as ‘the precarious career of a Japanese day laborer’.