Introduction: Representing Youth and Gender in Japanese Popular Culture

J. Coates
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Abstract

This special issue evolved from a panel on “Youth, Gender, and Power in Japanese Popular Culture” at the Society for Cinema and Media Studies Annual Conference in 2017. While the original panel focused closely on girls’ culture in Japan, engaging particularly with media representations of the “shōjo” (girl), our commitment to interrogating the networks of power around female-gendered youth in Japanese popular culture led us to wider considerations of the category of “youth.” The articles in this issue present new ways of reading a variety of images of girls and young women in Japanese popular culture, from 1940s films and 1950s pulp magazines to twenty-first-century shōjo manga, paying particular attention to the issue of representation and its often-conflicted relationship with lived experience. Examining the interrelation of youth and gender is a timely concern. In Japan, young people are raising their voices with increasing regularity and persuasive force on issues as varied as nuclear power, climate change, and sexual harassment. “Youthquake,” the term coined by Diana Vreeland in 1965 to describe the influence of youth on popular culture, recently returned to popular attention as the Oxford English Dictionary’s “Word of the Year” for 2017, suggesting that widening youth influence on popular discourse is a global
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导论:日本大众文化中的青春与性别表现
本期特刊是由2017年电影与媒体学会年会上的“日本大众文化中的青年、性别和权力”专题讨论演变而来的。虽然最初的小组主要关注日本的女孩文化,特别是“shōjo”(女孩)的媒体表现,但我们对日本流行文化中围绕女性青年的权力网络的质疑,使我们对“青年”这一类别进行了更广泛的思考。从20世纪40年代的电影和50年代的低俗杂志到21世纪的shōjo漫画,本期的文章呈现了解读日本流行文化中各种女孩和年轻女性形象的新方法,特别关注代表性问题及其与生活经验的经常冲突的关系。研究青年与性别的相互关系是一个及时的问题。在日本,年轻人在核电、气候变化、性骚扰等各种问题上的声音越来越频繁,越来越有说服力。“青年地震”(Youthquake)是戴安娜·弗里兰(Diana Vreeland)在1965年创造的一个词,用来描述年轻人对流行文化的影响。最近,这个词作为《牛津英语词典》2017年的“年度词汇”重新引起了大众的关注,这表明年轻人对流行话语的影响力日益扩大是一个全球性的现象
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