This edited book brings together studies on different aspects of marginalization in Japanese, creating a framework for studying marginalization which can also be applied in other linguistic and international contexts. The chapters in this book look at both marginalization of others and self-marginalization, examining the pragmatic strategies used to achieve marginalization, and investigating situations where it acts as an agentive tactic of speakers, in addition to a strategy of broader social structures. This book will be of interest to students and scholars of sociolinguistics, pragmatics,…mehr
This edited book brings together studies on different aspects of marginalization in Japanese, creating a framework for studying marginalization which can also be applied in other linguistic and international contexts. The chapters in this book look at both marginalization of others and self-marginalization, examining the pragmatic strategies used to achieve marginalization, and investigating situations where it acts as an agentive tactic of speakers, in addition to a strategy of broader social structures. This book will be of interest to students and scholars of sociolinguistics, pragmatics, linguistic anthropology, and East Asian languages and cultures.
Judit Kroo is Assistant Professor of Japanese Linguistics and Comparative Cultural Studies at Arizona State University, USA. Her current projects consider the social construction of standard or desirable gendered adulthoods in Japan and Korea, alternative economic practices among younger Japanese adults, and the construction of mediatized social personae. Kyoko Satoh is Professor of Sociolinguistics at Yokohama City University, Japan. Her research interests include display of self and identity constructions through linguistic tactics in Japanese.
Inhaltsangabe
Chapter 1: Introduction (Judit Kroo).- Part 1: Marginalization and Natural Language Data.- Chapter 2: Strategies of Discourse (Re)-Framing as Micropolitics Among Contemporary Japanese University Students (Judit Kroo).- Chapter 3: When the Model Becomes the Marginalized: Identity Struggles of Japanese Job-hunters (Andrew Barke and Momoyo Shimazu).- Chapter 4: The Struggle Against Hegemonic Femininity: The Narrative of a Japanese Actress (Kyoko Satoh).- Chapter 5: Intersectional Identities: Voices from the Margins of ELT in Japan (Yuzuko Nagashima and Luke Lawrence).- Chapter 6: Epistemic Primacy and Self/Other Marginalization in a Parliamentary Debate: A Case Study of Female Japanese Politicians (Keiko Tsuchiya).- Part 2: Marginalization and Mediatized Data.- Chapter 7: "We're Family": Japanese Characters' Categorizations of a Gay Man in a TV Drama (Junko Saito).- Chapter 8: Street Corners and Hugs: Queer Japanese Challenges to Heteronormativity Through Social Media (Gavin Furukawa).- Chapter 9: Self-denigration Among Japanese Female Fans Online: Creating Community Through Marginality (Giancarla Unser-Schutz).- Chapter 10: Connecting the Personal to the Collective: The haafu aruaru (Things That Happen to Racially/Ethnically 'Mixed' People) Narratives on Twitter (Rika Yamashita).- Chapter 11: Afterword (Judit Kroo and Kyoko Satoh).
Chapter 1: Introduction (Judit Kroo).- Part 1: Marginalization and Natural Language Data.- Chapter 2: Strategies of Discourse (Re)-Framing as Micropolitics Among Contemporary Japanese University Students (Judit Kroo).- Chapter 3: When the Model Becomes the Marginalized: Identity Struggles of Japanese Job-hunters (Andrew Barke and Momoyo Shimazu).- Chapter 4: The Struggle Against Hegemonic Femininity: The Narrative of a Japanese Actress (Kyoko Satoh).- Chapter 5: Intersectional Identities: Voices from the Margins of ELT in Japan (Yuzuko Nagashima and Luke Lawrence).- Chapter 6: Epistemic Primacy and Self/Other Marginalization in a Parliamentary Debate: A Case Study of Female Japanese Politicians (Keiko Tsuchiya).- Part 2: Marginalization and Mediatized Data.- Chapter 7: "We're Family": Japanese Characters' Categorizations of a Gay Man in a TV Drama (Junko Saito).- Chapter 8: Street Corners and Hugs: Queer Japanese Challenges to Heteronormativity Through Social Media (Gavin Furukawa).- Chapter 9: Self-denigration Among Japanese Female Fans Online: Creating Community Through Marginality (Giancarla Unser-Schutz).- Chapter 10: Connecting the Personal to the Collective: The haafu aruaru (Things That Happen to Racially/Ethnically 'Mixed' People) Narratives on Twitter (Rika Yamashita).- Chapter 11: Afterword (Judit Kroo and Kyoko Satoh).
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