Discourse, Gender and Shifting Identities in Japan

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AAVE
African American Vernacular English
aging
Category=CB
Category=CFB
Category=CFG
Category=CJCK
Category=JBSF1
Category=JHMC
Da Ne
Declarative Questions
Discourse Markers
discourse markers study
discourse strategies
discursive
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnographic Interviews
ethnographic methodology
gender identity negotiation
growing up
Ikuko Nakane
Interactional Particles
Japanese working class women
Kansai Dialect
Kaori Okano
Kokuritsu Kokugo
language and identity
language change across life stages
Lidia Tanaka
Multiple Identity Positions
Ongoing Ethnographic Study
Osaka Dialect
Participation Domain
Pearl Company
Plain Form
Politeness Strategies
Post-school Destinations
qualitative longitudinal research
Question Response Sequences
Quotative Particle
Rapport Management
Researcher's Understanding
Researcher’s Understanding
Sentence Final Particles
Shimako Iwasaki
sociocultural context
sociolinguistic analysis
style
Stylistic Domain
Upward Intonation
Women's language
Youth Language

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138104631
  • Weight: 385g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book is the first in a unique series drawn from an interdisciplinary, longitudinal project entitled ‘Thirty Years of Talk.’ For 30 years, Okano recorded ethnographic interviews and collected data on the language of working class women in Kobe, Japan. This long-range study sketches the transitions in these women's lives and how their language use, discourse and identities change in specific sociocultural contexts as they shift through different stages of their personal and public lives. It is a ground-breaking, ‘real time’ panel study that follows the same individuals and observes the same phenomena at regular intervals over three decades. In this volume the authors examine the changes in the speech of one particular woman, Kanako, as her social identity shifts from high-school girl to mother and fisherman’s wife, and as her relationship with the interviewer develops. They identify changes in linguistic strategies as she negotiates gender/sexuality norms, stylistic features related to the construction of rapport, the use of discourse markers as she gets older, and the interviewer’s information-seeking strategies.

Claire MAREE is Senior Lecturer in Japanese at the Asia institute, University of Melbourne. Her research spans the areas of critical language studies, gender/sexuality and language studies, media studies and queer studies. Major publications include ‘Onē-kotoba’ Ron (On ‘Onē-kotoba [language of queens]’) (Seidosha, 2013); Hatsuwasha no gengo sotoratejī toshite no negoshiēshon kōi (Negotiation as a Linguistic Strategy of Speakers) (Hituzi Shobo, 2007). Claire has published chapters in collected volumes on Japanese language and gender, pragmatics, and queer studies. She contributes articles to journals such as The Asia-Pacific Journal, Media international Australia, Nihon Joseigakkai-shi, Women's Studies, intersections, Gendai Shisō and Sexualities.

Kaori OKANO is Professor in Asian Studies/Japanese at La Trobe University. She researches in the field of the sociology and anthropology of inequality and education in Japan and East Asia, including multiculturalism, indigenous education, ethnography of growing up, and local activism (e.g., NPOs and NGOs). Her key publications include Rethinking Japanese Studies (with Sugimoto, Y., 2017), Nonformal Education and Civil Society in Japan (2016, Routledge), Minorities and Education in Multicultural Japan (co-ed. 2011, Routledge),) Young Women in Japan: Transitions to Adulthood (2009), Education in Contemporary Japan (with M. Tsuchiya, CUP, 1999) and School to Work Transition in Japan (1993).