Categorie: Hikikomori

  • APJ-JF: ‘Withdrawal and Belonging’

    APJ-JF: ‘Withdrawal and Belonging’

    In this research note,“Withdrawal and Belonging: Ethnographic Insights from a Hikikomori Rehabilitation Center in Japan,” published in the Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus, I draw on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in a rural rehabilitation center in Japan to illuminate the lived experiences of those deemed hikikomori.

    The article examines hikikomori not as social anomalies, but as windows into how contemporary societies organize work, belonging, and moral value in an increasingly lonely world. It argues that further ethnographic research is essential to foreground the experiences of people too often reduced to stereotypes.

    Elements of this research were previously explored in a public-facing essay for De Groene Amsterdammer; this article develops those insights into a broader anthropological and theoretical analysis.

    Read the article on Cambridge Core or access the full text below.


  • Psyche: ‘What do Japan’s hikikomori reveal about our lonely world?’

    Psyche: ‘What do Japan’s hikikomori reveal about our lonely world?’

    My essay, titled “The Burden of Being Unproductive” has been published at Psyche (Aeon group).

    Drawing on fieldwork in Japan, it explores the phenomenon of hikikomori and examines how their experience challenges conventional ideas of productivity, normality, and care.

    By scrutinising the meaning of the category hikikomori, I argue that while they are often portrayed as the epitome of social isolation, rehabilitation does not necessarily guarantee meaningful connection. In this way, the essay blurs the boundaries of the category and asks a deeper question: what do we deem ‘normal’?

    Read the essay here.

  • De Groene: ‘Een gemeenschap van kluizenaren’

    De Groene: ‘Een gemeenschap van kluizenaren’

    Voor het weekblad De Groene Amsterdammer schreef ik een stuk over mijn ervaring in een rehabilitatiecentrum voor hikikomori – personen die langdurig teruggetrokken uit de samenleving leven.

    Ik probeer dichtbij hun leefwereld te blijven, en tegelijk een bredere vraag aan te snijden: wat zegt deze Japanse werkelijkheid over onze eigen tijd? Over werk, verbondenheid, en het alledaagse isolement waarin steeds meer mensen terechtkomen.

    Lees het stuk hier.