Riding the Black Ship: Japan and Tokyo Disneyland

Riding the Black Ship: Japan and Tokyo Disneyland

1999 • 268 pages

Since it opened in 1983, Tokyo Disneyland has been analyzed mainly as an example of the globalization of the American leisure industry and its organizational culture, particularly the "company manual." By looking at how Tokyo Disneyland is experienced by employees, management, and visitors, Aviad Raz produces not only a cultural reading of the onstage show but also an ethnographic analysis of its production by those who work there and its reception by its customers.

Previous studies have seen Disneyland as a "black ship" - an exported, hegemonic model of American leisure and pop culture - that "conquered" Japan. By concentrating on the Japanese point of view, Raz shows that it is much more an example of successful domestication and that it has succeeded precisely because it has become Japanese even while marketing itself as foreign. Rather than being an agent of Americanization. Tokyo Disneyland is a simulated "America" showcased by and for the Japanese.


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62 primary books

#173 in Harvard East Asian Monographs

Harvard East Asian Monographs is a 62-book series with 62 released primary works first released in 9 with contributions by Kuo-chun Chao, David C. Cole, and Yung Chul Park.


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