Contents List of Figures and Tables Notes on Contributors Introduction: Sociology of Disaster and Post-Western Theory Laurence Roulleau-Berger and Yoshiyuki Yama 1 Disaster Recovery in Japan: the Concept of "Fukkou," Memory, and Emotional Recovery Yoshiyuki Yama 2 Sociology and Disasters in Europe and in East Asia Laurence Roulleau-Berger 3 Learning from the Disaster and the Post-disaster Recovery: Dreams and Reality 14 Years Later of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake Koichi Hasegawa 4 Homo Emotionalis --the Implicit Anthropology of Disaster Sociology BenoƮt Giry 5 Four Horsemen and the Red Queen: Intersectionality of Risks and Institutional Resilience in Taiwan Thung-Hong Lin 6 To Rebuild or Not to Rebuild? Disorientation and Re-grounding in Post-quake on Mount Etna Mara Benadusi, Rita Ciccaglione, Mario Mattia and Vincenzo Lo Bartolo 7 The Role of the Disaster Museum in Japan: Inheriting Memory and Promoting Disaster Education Bonjun Koo 8 Culturally Sensitive Reconstruction after Disasters: a Long-Term Ethnographic Research in Southwest China Qiaoyun Zhang 9 Disaster Entrepreneurs, Emotions and Environmental Movements in France and in China Pierre Manoury 10 Disasters, Livelihood, and Indigenous Cosmology: the Case of the Na in Sichuan and Yunnan (China) Chen Jin 11 Disasters, Emotions, and Recovery Laurence Roulleau-Berger and Oscar Truong Index.
Disasters, Recovery and Emotions in Asia and in Europe