种族主义依恋:达克-陈、黑人媚俗和卡哇伊文化

IF 0.4 4区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES Positions-Asia Critique Pub Date : 2022-02-01 DOI:10.1215/10679847-9418007
Erica Kanesaka
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:本文通过达克娃娃的历史,探讨反黑人种族主义媚俗与卡哇伊文化之间的联系。在1960年所谓的“Dakko-chan热潮”中,成千上万的日本人排队购买一个充气黑脸娃娃,这个娃娃有红色的圆嘴、草裙和闪烁的全息眼睛。Dakko的意思是“拥抱”,Dakko-chan之所以如此受欢迎,部分原因是它可以作为配饰佩戴,通过拥抱的手臂附着在身体上。这篇文章问的是,对于日本这个仍在从二战和美国占领中恢复过来的国家来说,以一个可拥抱的娃娃的形式接受美国的黑脸,意味着什么。这篇文章驳斥了黑脸在日本语境中失去意义的说法,认为Dakko-chan不能被认为没有种族主义含义。在围绕《美日安保条约》修订的政治动荡中出现的Dakko-chan,表达了关于种族、性别和国家的各种矛盾情绪,说明了对种族主义形式的情感依恋是如何在新的文化背景下积累而不是消散的。
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Racist Attachments: Dakko-chan, Black Kitsch, and Kawaii Culture
Abstract:This article explores the ties between anti-Black racist kitsch and kawaii culture through the history of the Dakko-chan doll. In what came to be called the "Dakko-chan boom" of 1960, tens of thousands of Japanese people lined up to purchase an inflatable blackface doll with a circular red mouth, grass skirt, and winking hologram eyes. Dakko means "to hug," and Dakko-chan's astronomical popularity resulted in part from the way the doll could be worn as an accessory, attached to the body by its hugging arms. This article asks what it meant for Japan, a nation still recovering from World War II and the American occupation, to quite literally embrace American blackface in the form of an embraceable doll. Rejecting the claim that blackface loses its significance in a Japanese context, this article argues that Dakko-chan cannot be considered devoid of racist meanings. Emerging amid the political turmoil surrounding the revision of the US-Japan Security Treaty, Dakko-chan came to express a wide range of contradictory feelings about race, sex, and nation, illustrating how affective attachments to racist forms have accrued rather than dissipated through their movement into new cultural contexts.
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来源期刊
Positions-Asia Critique
Positions-Asia Critique ASIAN STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
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