| Article | Author | Pages |
| Special Issue. Governing death and dying in Japan and its colonies. From state control to self-optimization |
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| Governing death and dying in Japan and its colonies. From state control to self-optimization |
Biontino, Juljan / Mladenova, Dorothea / Spoden Celia |
2-5 |
| Changes in funerary rites and burial practices in Modern Korea (1876-1945) |
Biontino, Juljan |
6-24 |
| Graveyard geomancy in Korea under Japanese rule. Focusing on the 1930s |
Han, Ri-Hye |
25-42 |
| The "improvement of funeral ceremonies" movement and the creation of "modern" Japanese subjects in Taiwan during Japanese rule |
Tainaka, Chizuru |
43-62 |
| Deciding one's own death in advance. Biopower, living wills, and resistance to a legislation of death with dignity in Japan |
Spoden, Celia |
63-82 |
| Governing through kodokushi. Japan's lonely deaths and their impact on community self-government |
Dahl, Nils |
83-102 |
| Optimizing one's own death. The Shûkatsu industry and the enterprising self in a hyper-aged society |
Mladenova, Dorothea |
103-127 |
| Smartphones versus NHK? Mobilization strategies of the Japanese anti-nuclear movement under Abe's restrictive media policy |
Wiemann, Anna |
128-140 |