What linguistic anthropologist Miyako Inoue did for Japanese women's language, Maree has done for onē-kotoba and onē-kyara—the language of queerqueen personalities. While Maree draws on examples from Japanese media, the book is a must-read for anyone working on media of any sort. Maree lays bare the manipulations at play and the heteronormative norms that undergird social media today.
Cindy SturtzSreetharan, Melbourne Asia Review
From the twins Osugi and Peeco to longstanding icon Miwa Akihiro, Claire Maree traces the figure of the Japanese queerqueen, showing how a diversity of gender identifications, sexual orientations, and discursive styles are commodified and packaged together to form this character. Representations of gay men's speech have changed in tandem with gender norms, increasingly crossing over into popular media via the body of the "authentic" gay male up to and including the current "LGBT boom" in Japan. In this context, queerqueen demonstrates how commercial practices of recording, transcribing, and editing spoken interactions and use of on-screen text encode queerqueen speech as inherently excessive and in need of containment. Tackling questions of authenticity, self-censorship, and the restrictions of heteronormativity within this perception of queer excess, Maree shows how queerqueen styles reproduce stereotypes of gender, sexuality, and desire that are essential to the business of mainstream entertainment.
Les mer
Introduction
Queerqueens: An Introduction
Chapter One
Booms: Recycling the Visual and Sonic Image of the Queerqueen Figure
Chapter Two
Excess in Print: (Re)tracing Conversational Dialogues
Chapter Three
Queen-personality talk: Writing queens on the Small Screen
Chapter Four
Linguistic Chaos: Hybrid Animation and the Queerqueen
Chapter Five
Beeping Deluxe: Staging Self-censorship and the Limits of Excess
Chapter Six
Heave-ho: Radical Recontextualization
Chapter Seven
Cyclical Movements or Writing Excess
Les mer
"What linguistic anthropologist Miyako Inoue did for Japanese women's language, Maree has done for on=e-kotoba and on=e-kyaraDLthe language of queerqueen personalities. While Maree draws on examples from Japanese media, the book is a must-read for anyone working on media of any sort. Maree lays bare the manipulations at play and the heteronormative norms that undergird social media today." -- Cindy SturtzSreetharan, Melbourne Asia
Review
Les mer
Selling point: Critically analyzes the figure of the queerqueen in a diversity of Japanese media texts from conversational dialogues (taidan) to parody animations
Selling point: Proposes the notion of "language labor" as central to our understanding of how styles are entextualized, mediatized, and commodified
Selling point: Examines tropes of censorship and voyeurism in contemporary print and audiovisual media
Les mer
Claire Maree, Associate Professor & Reader, the Asia Institute, University of Melbourne.
Claire Maree is Associate Professor & Reader at the Asia Institute, University of Melbourne. Her research spans the areas of gender, sexuality and language studies, media studies, and queer studies. She is co-editor of Discourse, Gender and Shifting Identities in Japan and author of two research monographs in Japanese.
Les mer
Selling point: Critically analyzes the figure of the queerqueen in a diversity of Japanese media texts from conversational dialogues (taidan) to parody animations
Selling point: Proposes the notion of "language labor" as central to our understanding of how styles are entextualized, mediatized, and commodified
Selling point: Examines tropes of censorship and voyeurism in contemporary print and audiovisual media
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780190869618
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
463 gr
Høyde
159 mm
Bredde
241 mm
Dybde
18 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
230
Forfatter