'Somber school uniforms and cloyingly cute fashions seem equally ubiquitous in metropolitan Japan, and the tense relationship between the official regulation of dress and the playful aesthetic of cuteness is the subject of McVeigh's fine, provocative study. With subtle analysis and a focused appreciation of the forms of everyday life in Japan.McVeigh offers a powerful theorizing of how state and corporate interests project themselves on to the bodies of students and workers and how individuals can fashion styles of resistance.' Professor William W. KellyYale University'Why does civil society in Japan take on the contours that it does? How does the state enter the drama? McVeigh's careful mix of theoretical control and ethnographic detail provide a refreshing perspective which takes the reader from the 'micro' fabric of uniforms to the 'macro' fabric of society. This book deftly demonstrates how the self emerges over the life cycle amid the complex matrices of political ec