Gender and Identity in Modern Japan
This project is designed to discuss the commodification of identity in Japan and how Japanese youth are rejecting traditional identities endorsed by the Nationalist regime in an effort to take control over their own identities within the globalized Capitalist culture. Japanese men and women have more freedom today than they have historically to pave their own futures and express themselves through sexuality and fashion. However, as new identities emerge and take root within the culture, Capitalist responses to the demand force unexpected changes. This project will explore the motivations for these changes, as well as the commodified response by the global market.
This page has paths:
- Are You Considered Beautiful In Japan? Courtney Cho
- Hope for the Future: Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder Courtney Cho
Contents of this path:
This page has tags:
Contents of this tag:
- Sexuality & The State
- The Salaryman Identity As An Ideal For Nationalism and Success
- The Cycle of Power
- The Salaryman, Hikikomori, and Hostesses
- Commodification of Desire
- How the body of the salaryman is utilized
- Shoujo and Doll-Like Beauty
- Fetishization of Gay Men in Manga
- Hokikomori: Reclusive Lifestyle In Fear of the Salaryman Identity
- Hostessing: A Role in Maintaining Corporate Relationships
- Madame Butterfly and the Westernization of Sexuality Discourses
- Who are Herbivore men?
- Coexistence in a Capitalist Japan
- Salaryman Culture and Masculine Identity
- Housewives' Magazines and Gender Confinement in Post-War Japan
- Cross-dressing in Shinjuku Ni-chōme and Transgender Culture in Japan
- Karoshi: Consequences of the Salaryman Identity
- Commodification of Identity
- Biopower
- Capitalizing on Japanese Youth Culture
- Rejecting Japanese Nationalist Gender Identities
- Feminine Desire in Japan as an Agent of Social Change
- Japanese Popular Culture
- Beauty Culture