Buch, Englisch, 238 Seiten, Format (B × H): 153 mm x 216 mm, Gewicht: 448 g
ISBN: 978-3-030-67824-1
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
This edited book brings together studies on different aspects of marginalization in Japanese, creating a framework for studying marginalization which can also be applied in other linguistic and international contexts. The chapters in this book look at both marginalization of others and self-marginalization, examining the pragmatic strategies used to achieve marginalization, and investigating situations where it acts as an agentive tactic of speakers, in addition to a strategy of broader social structures. This book will be of interest to students and scholars of sociolinguistics, pragmatics, linguistic anthropology, and East Asian languages and cultures.
Zielgruppe
Research
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Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1: Introduction (Judit Kroo).- Part 1: Marginalization and Natural Language Data.- Chapter 2: Strategies of Discourse (Re)-Framing as Micropolitics Among Contemporary Japanese University Students (Judit Kroo).- Chapter 3: When the Model Becomes the Marginalized: Identity Struggles of Japanese Job-hunters (Andrew Barke and Momoyo Shimazu).- Chapter 4: The Struggle Against Hegemonic Femininity: The Narrative of a Japanese Actress (Kyoko Satoh).- Chapter 5: Intersectional Identities: Voices from the Margins of ELT in Japan (Yuzuko Nagashima and Luke Lawrence).- Chapter 6: Epistemic Primacy and Self/Other Marginalization in a Parliamentary Debate: A Case Study of Female Japanese Politicians (Keiko Tsuchiya).- Part 2: Marginalization and Mediatized Data.- Chapter 7: “We’re Family”: Japanese Characters’ Categorizations of a Gay Man in a TV Drama (Junko Saito).- Chapter 8: Street Corners and Hugs: Queer Japanese Challenges to Heteronormativity Through Social Media (Gavin Furukawa).- Chapter 9: Self-denigration Among Japanese Female Fans Online: Creating Community Through Marginality (Giancarla Unser-Schutz).- Chapter 10: Connecting the Personal to the Collective: The haafu aruaru (Things That Happen to Racially/Ethnically ‘Mixed’ People) Narratives on Twitter (Rika Yamashita).- Chapter 11: Afterword (Judit Kroo and Kyoko Satoh).