Martinez aimed to compose a work that represented a broad spectrum of cultural perspectives, and the contributors of the collection come from both Japan and several Western countries. Martinez also notes in her introduction that five of the ten have backgrounds in anthropology, and Doug Slaymaker, writing for
Monumenta Nipponica, felt that the work as a whole takes a viewpoint with a particular emphasis on that field as a result. The collection features four sections, the first including an introduction by Martinez and a chapter on by
Masao Yamaguchi. Martinez delineates the following sections of the work by discussion of gender. The second section, titled "The Male Domain", starts with an essay by
Tom Gill discussing cultural narratives of superheroes across Japanese history. Bill Kelly proposes an argument for the popularity of
karaoke in Japanese culture, and
Isolde Standish's chapter draws comparison between the anime film
Akira(1988) and culture.
Susan J. Napier contributes a chapter on
manga that begins the third section, "The Female Domain". Tanaka Keiko examines the similarities in language between women's magazines and educational textbooks, and Paul Harvey writes on the themes of progressivism and traditionalism in Japanese television dramas. The closing section, "Shifting Boundaries", begins with an essay on the relationship between romance and existence as a public figure by . Nagashima Nobuhiro studies the formation of a cult following a Japanese racehorse. Finally, Jonathan Watts contributes an essay on the rising popularity of the
J.League soccer competition.
Mark Schilling felt that Martinez allowed the contributing authors a relatively high degree of freedom when choosing their points of study; he wrote in his '''' review that the section titles that had been chosen were so broad that they become "all but meaningless". Slaymaker wrote that a common theme connecting many of the chapters was the "tension between the traditional and the contemporary". Joy Hendry's review in the
Japan Forum also identified gender, global culture, and several other recurring topics in the work. == Reception ==