Overview
Anne Allison is a cultural anthropologist who researches the intersection between political economy, everyday life, and the imagination in the context of late capitalist, post-industrial Japan. Her work spans the subjects of sexuality, pornography, and maternal labor to the globalization of Japanese youth products and the precarity of irregular workers. She is the author of Nightwork: Sexuality, Pleasure, and Corporate Masculinity in a Tokyo Hostess Club (University of Chicago Press, 1994—an ethnography of the Japanese corporate practice of entertaining employees and customers in the sexualized atmosphere of hostess clubs; Permitted and Prohibited Desires: Mothers, Comics, and Censorship in Japan (University of California Press 2000)—a collection of essays analyzing the complex desires linking motherhood, pornographic comics, and popular culture; and Millennial Monsters: Japanese Toys and the Global Imagination (University of California Press, 2006)—a study of the intermeshing of fantasy, capitalism, and cultural politics in the rise of Japan's brand of "cool" youth-goods on the global marketplace. Her most recent book, Precarious Japan (forthcoming from Duke University Press, 2013) looks at the socio-economic shifts in post-corporatist Japan towards precaritization of work, sociality, and everyday security.
Current Appointments & Affiliations
Professor of Cultural Anthropology
·
2005 - Present
Cultural Anthropology,
Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
Professor in Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies
·
2021 - Present
Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies,
Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
Bass Fellow
·
2011 - Present
Cultural Anthropology,
Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
Education, Training & Certifications
The University of Chicago ·
1986
Ph.D.