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Conformity, Revolt, and Collapse: A Countercultural Signaling Framework for the Rise and Fall of Punch Perms in Postwar Japan

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  • YAMAMURA, Eiji

Abstract

This paper develops a countercultural signaling framework to explain the rise and fall of the punch perm in postwar Japan. Three conditions determined its social salience: the normative condition of democratic selfhood introduced by the postwar occupation, the income condition, and the systemic condition of a dominant social order sufficient to serve as a target for countercultural opposition. The analysis reveals a three-tier masculine appearance structure: the side-parted hairstyle as the elite standard, the crew cut as the working-class conformity signal, and the punch perm as its countercultural negation. The punch perm's peak coincided with the peak of Japan's corporate system in the 1980s. Its collapse reflected the destruction of the systemic condition. The analysis contributes to cultural economy by showing how value is relationally produced through opposition, and how institutional shifts reshape the conditions under which cultural forms acquire and lose social significance.

Suggested Citation

  • YAMAMURA, Eiji, 2026. "Conformity, Revolt, and Collapse: A Countercultural Signaling Framework for the Rise and Fall of Punch Perms in Postwar Japan," SocArXiv fe7tj_v1, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:fe7tj_v1
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/fe7tj_v1
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Yamamura, Eiji, 2009. "Dynamics of social trust and human capital in the learning process: The case of the Japan garment cluster in the period 1968-2005," Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, Elsevier, vol. 72(1), pages 377-389, October.
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