Article published In: Reconsidering Language and Gender in Contemporary Japan and among the Japanese Diaspora amid the #MeToo Movement
Edited by Kikuko Omori and Hiroshi Ota
[Journal of Asian Pacific Communication 33:1] 2023
► pp. 87–102
A cure for woundless pain
Consumption of innocence in Japanese idol culture
Published online: 8 October 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/japc.00072.she
https://doi.org/10.1075/japc.00072.she
Abstract
As a cultural construct, the idol is a consumer product created to “heal” in the age of exhaustion. Layering a
“guardian” aspect onto Laura Mulvey’s “male gaze,” this paper contextualizes the commodification and consumption of innocence.
This paper brings the documentary, Tokyo Idols (2017), and the animated film, Perfect Blue
(1997), into a conversation to theorize how femininity is constructed and commodified in Japan’s pop idol industry. The idol
culture consumes innocence only to create more trauma for women by stressing the arbitrary importance of innocence and sacrificing
female agency in the process.
Keywords: idol, Tokyo Idols, Perfect Blue, guardian gaze, feminism
Article outline
- Male fantasy and patriarchal subconscious
- Innocent construct
- The guardian gaze
- Imposed trauma narrative and the mirror stage
- Conclusion
- Conflict of interest
- Acknowledgements
References
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