Emotional Attachments to Japanese Women's Language:Language, Gender, and Affect in Colonialism
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概要
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This paper demonstrates how Japanese people came to possess strong affective attachments to women's language by analyzing metapragmatic comments about women's speech in two opposite colonization experiences of Japan. During WWII, women's language was suddenly elevated to an imperial tradition and a symbol of patriarchy. This change was mediated by the desire to imagine a superior imperial language to legitimate linguistic colonization of the East Asian countries. During the American Occupation after the war, women's language was both separated from the emperor system and associated with natural sex differentiation. Being de‐politicized and naturalized, women's language became the symbol of Japanese tradition, pride, and order, which Japanese intellectuals had lost in the demise in the war. These historical processes engendered construction of both the emotional commitment of people to women's language and an ideal subjectivity of a speaking woman.
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関連論文
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- 隠された性・男という性 : 「沖縄少女暴行事件」という表現をめぐって
- Translation: inter-lingual construction of indexicality
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- 欲望の構築 : ティーン雑誌に見る読者の消費者化
- 言語規範としての「女ことば」
- ことばと差別
- Desiring One Imperial Language : Affect, Gender and Colonialism
- ホモソーシャル・ファンタジー--スポーツ新聞の世界
- Emotional Attachments to Japanese Women's Language:Language, Gender, and Affect in Colonialism
- Language as Heterosexual Resource
- Theorizing the Constructive‐ideological Approach to Japanese Women's Language
- Metalinguistic Practices vs. Subversive Practices
- Construction of"Men's National Language"in Japan (1868-1926)
- Discursive Construction of the Ideology of "Women's Language" : "Schoolgirl Language" in the Meiji Period(1868-1912)