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This Companion is a comprehensive examination of the varied ways in which gender issues manifest throughout culture in Japan, using a range of international perspectives to examine private and public constructions of identity, as well as gender and sexuality inflected cultural production. The Routledge Companion to Gender and Japanese Culture features both new work and updated accounts of classic scholarship, providing a go-to reference work for contemporary scholarship on gender in Japanese culture. The volume is interdisciplinary in scope, with chapters drawing from a range of perspectives, fields, and disciplines, including anthropology, art history, history, law, linguistics, literature, media and cultural studies, politics, and sociology. This reflects the fundamentally interdisciplinary nature of the dual focal points of this volume – gender and culture – and the ways in which these themes infuse a range of disciplines and sub-fields. In this volume, Jennifer Coates, Lucy Fraser, and Mark Pendleton have brought together an essential guide to experiences of gender in Japanese culture today – perfect for students, scholars, and anyone else interested in Japan, culture, gender studies, and beyond.

Arvustused

"The Routledge Companion to Gender and Japanese Culture is an unprecedented collection of new and updated accounts of original texts which constitutes the most comprehensive overview of both classic and contemporary scholarship in the field of gender and culture. This interdisciplinary-based volume analyzes the distribution of power across genders from all aspects of life in Japan and challenges us to re-examine the crossroads of culture and gender."

Hideko Abe, Chair and Professor, East Asian Studies, Colby College

"At last, a handbook on Japanese gender. And one which is both comprehensive and up-to-date in terms of coverage, methodology and theory. This should rightly go straight on to the reading lists of anyone teaching courses on contemporary Japan."

Roger Goodman, Nissan Professor of Japanese Studies, University of Oxford

"The Routledge Companion to Gender and Japanese Culture offers a wide range of refreshing and critical perspectives on genders and Japanese culture. Particularly impressive is how this volume tackles the complex intersecting issues of gender, race, ethnicity, class, and others. It is informative, accessible, essential reading for anyone who wishes to have a comprehensive understanding of genders in Japan."

Kazue Harada, Assistant Professor of Japanese, Japanese Language and Culture, Miami University, Ohio

"The Routledge Companion to Gender and Japanese Culture is an important and useful resource with a broad scope of essays from accomplished scholars. This vital collection faithfully reflects the history of the field and paves the way for future research and pedagogy on gender and society in Japan."

Kathryn Hemmann, Assistant Professor, Japanese Literature and Popular Culture, George Mason University

List of figures
ix
List of tables
x
Acknowledgements xi
Contributor biographies xii
Note on the romanization of Japanese xx
Introduction: gender and culture in Japan today 1(8)
Jennifer Coates
Lucy Fraser
Mark Pendleton
PART I Theorizing and historicizing gender and Japanese culture
9(72)
1 Gendering modern Japanese history: a historiographical update
11(11)
Barbara Molony
2 Gender in pre-modern Japan
22(9)
Rajyashree Pandey
3 Debates in Japanese feminism
31(9)
Ayako Kano
4 Gender and language
40(10)
Miyako Inoue
5 Masculinity studies in Japan
50(10)
Emma E. Cook
6 Transgender, non-binary genders, and intersex in Japan
60(9)
S.P.F. Dale
7 Gender and ethnicity in urban Japan
69(12)
Jamie Coates
PART II Home, family, and the "private sphere"
81(74)
8 Gender and the Koseki
83(9)
David Chapman
9 Attitudes to marriage and childbearing
92(14)
Ekaterina Hertog
10 Family, inequality, and the work-family balance in contemporary Japan
106(9)
Aya Ezawa
11 Intimacy in and beyond the family
115(10)
Allison Alexy
12 Rural gender construction and decline: negotiating risks through nostalgia
125(10)
Anna Vainio
13 Changing folk cultures of pregnancy and childbirth
135(11)
Manami Yasui
Lucy Fraser
Madelein Shimizu
14 Religion and gender in Japan
146(9)
Yumi Murayama
Erica Baffelli
PART III Work, politics, and the "public sphere"
155(74)
15 Gender and the law: progress and remaining problems
157(11)
Stephanie Assmann
16 Gender and the workplace
168(11)
Helen Macnaughtan
17 Sex Work
179(10)
Torn Takeoka
18 Gender, labour, and migration in Japan
189(10)
Helena Hof
Gracia Liu-Farrer
19 Women in electoral politics
199(11)
Emma Dalton
20 Demanding publics: women and activism
210(9)
Chelsea Szendi Schieder
21 Lesbians and queer women in Japan
219(10)
Jane Wallace
PART IV Cultures of play: leisure, music, and performance
229(60)
22 Gender and musical subcultures in Japan
231(9)
Rosemary Overell
23 Gender in digital technologies and cultures
240(11)
Jennifer Coates
Laura Haapio-Kirk
24 Women and physical culture in Japanese history
251(10)
Keiko Ikeda
25 Myths of masculinity in the martial arts
261(9)
Oleg Benesch
26 The continuum of male beauty in contemporary Japan
270(9)
Masafumi Monden
27 Performing gender: cosplay and otaku cultures and spaces
279(10)
Emerald King
PART V Cultural production: literature, cinema, and popular culture
289(82)
28 Gender in Japanese literature and literary studies
291(11)
Laura Clark
Lucy Fraser
29 Gender and poetry
302(9)
Andrew Campana
30 Gender, manga, and anime
311(9)
Grace En-Yi Ting
31 Cuteness studies and Japan
320(11)
Joshua Paul Dale
32 Gender and visual culture
331(9)
Gunhild Borggreen
33 Gender, media, and misogyny in Japan
340(11)
Sally McLaren
34 Representing girls in cinema
351(10)
Kate Taylor-Jones
Georgia Thomas-Parr
35 Gendered desires: pornography and consumption
361(10)
Alexandra Hambleton
PART VI Texts and contexts: case studies
371(47)
36 Gendered high and low culture in Japan: the transgressing flesh in Kawabata's dance writing
373(9)
Fusako Innami
37 Genre and gender: romantic friendships and the homosocial imperative in the ninkyo (chivalrous) genre film
382(9)
Isolde Standish
38 Girls with arms and girls as arms in anime: the use of girls for "soft" militarism
391(8)
Akiko Sugawa-Shimada
39 Beyond the "parasite single"
399(9)
Lynne Nakano
40 Japanese gay men's experiences of gender: negotiating the hetero system
408(10)
Tliomas Baudtnette
Index 418
Jennifer Coates is Senior Lecturer in Japanese Studies at the School of East Asian Studies, University of Sheffield. She is the author of Making Icons: Repetition and the Female Image in Japanese Cinema, 19451964 (2016), as well as journal articles and book chapters on cinema and audiences in postwar and contemporary Japan. Her current ethnographic research project focuses on early postwar film audiences in Japan.

Lucy Fraser is Lecturer in Japanese at The University of Queensland, where she teaches Japanese literature, popular culture, and language. She researches fairy tale studies in Japanese and English, with particular interests in ideas of gender and animals in retellings of folktales and traditional stories. She is the author of The Pleasures of Metamorphosis: Japanese and English Fairy Tale Transformations of The Little Mermaid (2017). She has translated short stories by writers such as Kawakami Hiromi and Hoshino Tomoyuki and literary and cultural studies criticism by scholars such as Kan Satoko, Fujimoto Yukari, and Honda Masuko.

Mark Pendleton is Lecturer in Japanese Studies at the University of Sheffield. A cultural and social historian by training, his research interests lie in modern and contemporary Japan, East Asian memory studies, and transnational histories of gender and sexuality. He has published in a number of academic journals including Japanese Studies and Asian Studies Review , and has contributed book chapters on topics related to historical justice and memory, transnational sexual politics in East Asia, and Japanese dark tourism. He is a member of the editorial committee of leading history journal History Workshop Journal .