Commodifying affection, authority and gender in the everyday objects of Japan

被引:23
作者
McVeigh, B
机构
[1] Department of Anthropology, Tôyô Gakuen University
[2] Tôyô Gakuen University, Nagareyama-shi, Chiba 270-01
关键词
communication; control; gender; Japan; power; social relations;
D O I
10.1177/135918359600100302
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Cute objects are encountered everywhere in Japan: in advertising, company logos, everyday objects and pornography; and in government-sponsored public safety posters, baby faces, smiling children, tiny bunnies and beaming bears are used to inform, warn, advise, admonish and shape opinion. Cuteness communicates power relations and power play, effectively combining weakness, submissiveness and humility with influence, domination and control. It merges meekness, admiration and attachment with benevolence, tenderness and sympathy. This paper focuses on the gendered aspect of cute things: how they communicate messages about being the 'ideal' woman. The multivocality of cuteness is revealed by employing Turner's symbolic analysis and this paper discusses the meanings and cultural values that, embedded in all the varied objects of cuteness, constitute a socionormative commentary about how women should behave, especially vis-a-vis men. Examples are provided to show how cuteness, as a sentiment that has been objectified, commodified and commercialized, affords communicative potency.
引用
收藏
页码:291 / 312
页数:22
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