Forschung
Interversity – Movements in uncertainty
Interversity – Movements in uncertainty
Researching multiple layers, characteristics, and directions of diversity in Japan and beyond
The Vienna School of Japanese Studies unites an anthropological/ethnographic tradition with reflexive social sciences, and critical cultural studies. Through our research and teaching activities, we frame Japanese Studies as interdisciplinary area studies, focusing on the intersectional, diverse, and complex realities constructed in, on, and through "Japan".
From diversity to interversity
Our interdisciplinary research focus shifts the attention from “increasing diversity” to “interversity”, and from migration to “movements in uncertainty”. While the discourse on diversity and related concepts such as “super-diversity” originally had a critical direction, “increasing diversity” has become an allegedly apolitical, often-affirmative buzzword that tends to conceal underlying social and political problems, inequalities, and counter-movements. We propose “interversity” as an alternative, offering inter-sectional perspectives on actual and perceived increases in diversity. Through our research, we account for factors such as forced movements, immobilities, and counter-movements to diversity that try to reproduce the alleged socio-economic and socio-cultural homogeneity of the past and present.
We use the term “interversity” to capture three basic dimensions of this agenda:
- Interrelational: Instead of looking at increasing diversity as a unidirectional process, we ask how movements towards more diversity and counter-movements towards or in defense of homogeneity, isolation, or exclusion are interrelated. Notably, we look at Japan not as an isolated (or “unique”) case, but as a site that is co-constitutive of global processes – including the climate catastrophe and global anti-liberal backlash against migration and diversity.
- Intersectional: We focus on how movements toward diversity produce new inequalities, reproduce or amplify existing cleavages, and create new forms of differentiation within and across social groups, regions, and identities.
- Interdisciplinary: Researching the movements we are interested in requires moving beyond disciplinary boundaries, combining research approaches from social sciences and cultural studies. Engaging with social, economic and political dimensions, the former offer insight into contemporary conditions and lived experiences. The latter inquire how imageries of these movements and a (more or less) diverse Japan are produced and negotiated in media, literature, and public discourse. Interdisciplinarity also implies moving beyond the notion of Japan as a natural category defined by the nation state , and toward a critical theory and approach to empirical and comparative area studies in the 21st century.

Photo by Micah Camper auf Unsplash
Background and rationale
Over the past decades, increasing diversity has been discussed – and often celebrated – extensively in the research on Japan. Indeed, we see growing migration flows into Japan in the context of acute and projected labour shortages. We find urban migrants seeking alternative lifestyles in rural areas, and we know that career trajectories, relationships, and gender roles are diversifying especially in metropolitan centres. We also see growing recognition of ethnic and cultural diversity in Japan, as notions of nationally bounded “Japaneseness” and cultural nationalism represented in media and literature are challenged by narratives of ethnic and multi-racial minorities (e.g. by non-Japanese authors in the field of Japanese literature).
At a closer look, however, increasing diversity is hardly a sufficient depiction of the multifaceted socio-economic, political, and cultural processes that have been and still are transforming Japan. The intensified movement across borders and boundaries – both literally and metaphorically – as well as the global entanglement of ideas, narratives and cultural objects challenges prevalent ideas of a homogenous culture and identity, but at the same time threatens cherished traditions and established worldviews, thus shifting, fragmenting, and polarising discourses of everyday life. While the term “increasing diversity” suggests a unidirectional movement, these processes are multi-layered, and often contradictory. The globalisation of Japan’s urban landscapes, for example, often brings not more diversity, but rather conformity in the shape of standardised aesthetic trends, business models, and certain patterns of biographies and lifestyles. Movements are also selective. While more people come to Japan for work or leisure, stagnating wages, inflation and precarious working conditions mean that young Japanese today are markedly less likely to leave Japan to study, work, or travel, thus confining their cultural knowledge and worldviews to Japan. Recent migration flows into rural areas unfold in the context of decades of rural outmigration, which in some ways has made rural peripheries decidedly less diverse. Moreover, migration also can produce new forms of segregation, be it between residents and “technical trainees” forced to live in isolation, or between rural communities and urban in-migrants connecting first and foremost with like-minded lifestyle migrants. And while the diversification of lifestyles and life courses creates new opportunities for some individuals, others face social isolation and loneliness – not least in the context of job- or education related movements – which potentially become the seed for extremist views against various facets of diversity (e.g., migration, gender, sexuality).
Interversity in the tradition of the Vienna School of Japanese Studies
As a research agenda, “interversity” aims to extend and synthesize the previous research foci of Japanese Studies at the University of Vienna. We are drawing, for example, from previous and ongoing work on crisis and transition in rural Japan, representations of diversity in Japanese media, migration and the Japanese diaspora, and identity constructions by citizens and artists as well as the political struggles that occur across local, regional and national levels. “Interversity” is thus not a ready-made argument, but a conceptual framework to combine and foster the strengths of empirical interdisciplinary research in Japanese Studies at the University of Vienna. In line with this objective, we also build on ongoing efforts to integrate research and teaching. This includes regular research circles with staff members, PhD candidates, and advanced students (kenkyûkai), the organization of student excursions, designing research-based courses, and the integration of MA theses into our research agenda.
