@article{oai:edo.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000117, author = {清水, 一彦 and Shimizu, Kazuhiko}, month = {2014-06-12}, note = {In the early summer of 1964, a band of young men and women suddenly appeared on a street in Ginza, Tokyo's highend shopping district. Called the Miyuki-zoku after the name of the street, Miyuki-dori, today it is often mentioned that this tribe of young people were related to Heibon Punch and VAN from the very start. This study, however, attempts to show that an economic group under the framework of fashion brand VAN reconstructed the group memory of the Miyuki-zoku and delivered this to media; the media in turn carried articles on this reconstructed memory without checking the facts; the readers of this published memory then accepted these narratives as comfortable personal memory; and as a result of such interactions, after the mid 1980s, the social memory of the Miyuki-zoku was reconstructed from a negative and anti-social memory to a positive "afterthought memory" of a stylish youth culture.}, title = {Reshaping the Social Memory of the Miyuki-zoku}, year = {}, yomi = {シミズ, カズヒコ} }