Journal of Lifology
Online ISSN : 2433-2933
Volume 34
Displaying 1-3 of 3 articles from this issue
Original Paper
Research Notes
  • Chouli PEI
    2018 Volume 34 Pages 15-30
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: February 02, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    The Nachichang Apartment complex was the first high-rise apartment complex in Taipei City. This paper details some of the life stories of the residents of Nachichang Apartments and how their living environment impacted their life course. This paper argues that there are four reasons for the formation of the particular living environment in Nachichang Apartments. First, the architecture was a set precondition because of which the residents needed to perform various actions. Second, as most residents were urban migrants, their shared experience of settling in cities and their understanding of the difficulties involved created flexible values that allowed others to build an addition in shared spaces. Residents’ life experiences before they immigrated to Taipei provided shared cultural vocabularies of arranging their living environment. Third, the low cost house modifications by the craftsmen living in Nachichang Apartments or by people part of the residents’ human network has also contributed to the living environment. Fourth, the loose housing management rules and related laws have allowed the residents to expand and change their apartments and living spaces according to their own means and wishes.

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  • Shinya KANEKO, Shohei MIKI
    2018 Volume 34 Pages 31-40
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: February 02, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    This study reports the results of a survey on the transformation of fisherman’s houses due to changes in kelp harvesting. The survey was conducted in the Kamoiunbe area of Rausu town in the Menashi district of Hokkaido on three fisherman’s houses that were open at the time of the survey and consented to participate. First, by the 1980s, infrastructure such as roads and electricity had already been developed, and industrial techniques such as aquaculture and drying sheds had been modernized. The survey results also revealed that there had been recent changes in the social structure due to the aging local population, the lack of successors, and the global changes in the marine environment. Second, the results from the three surveyed fisherman’s houses revealed that while more recent lodges had a particular style, there had been a shift toward highly durable structural and exterior materials. Other lifestyle changes had also occurred, such as a shift toward floor plans that accorded greater privacy to the resident families and workers and an expanded use of home appliances.

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