Project
Beyond the Buraku: The Negotiation of Burakumin Identity in Contemporary Japan
Division of Research Programs
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Photo caption
Shinjuku Park Tower, NTT East, and Tokyo Opera City, view from the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building No.1.
Courtesy of Pixabay

Photo caption
Shinjuku Park Tower, NTT East, and Tokyo Opera City, view from the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building No.1.
Courtesy of Pixabay
The burakumin present a paradox about Japanese identity: even though they are Japan’s largest minority population with almost 3 million members, they remain almost invisible from Japanese society. Scholar Christopher Bondy explores this hidden minority in Voice, Silence, and Self: Negotiations of Buraku Identity in Contemporary Japan.