Cover not available

Fluid Orality in the Discourse of Japanese Popular Culture

HardboundAvailable
ISBN 9789027256683 | EUR 95.00 | USD 143.00
 
e-Book
ISBN 9789027267139 | EUR 95.00 | USD 143.00
 
Get fulltext from our e-platform
This volume invites the reader into the world of pragmatic and discourse studies in Japanese popular culture. Through “character-speak”, the book analyzes quoted speech in light (graphic) novels, the effeminate onee kotoba in talk shows, narrative character in keetai (mobile phone) novels, floating whispers in manga, and fictionalized dialects in television drama series. Explorations into conversational interaction, internal monologue, rhetorical figures, intertextuality, and the semiotic mediation between verbal and visual signs reveal how speakers manipulate language in performing playful “characters” and “characteristics”. Most prominent in the discourse of Japanese popular culture is its “fluid orality”. We find the essential oral nature in and across genres of Japanese popular culture, and observe seamless transitions among styles and speech variations. This fluidity is understood as a feature of polyphonic speech initiated not by the so-called ideal singular speaker, but by a multiple and often shifting interplay of one’s speaking selves performing as various characters. Challenging traditional (Western) linguistic theories founded on the concept of the autonomous speaker, this study ventures into open and embracing pragmatic and discourse studies that inquire into the very nature of our speaking selves.
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 263] 2016.  xi, 344 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 14 March 2016
Table of Contents
Cited by (16)

Cited by 16 other publications

Matsuda, Yuki
2025.  Modulating empathy: the visual design of the reader-character relations in Piano no Mori . Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Inoue, Miyako
2023. “As if I were otherwise” metapragmatics of ego-splitting and virtualization, nanchatte!. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2023:284  pp. 59 ff. DOI logo
Chen, Li-Chi
2022. Humour and teasing in gay Taiwanese men’s mediatised interaction on an LGBTQ-oriented YouTube entertainment variety show. Gender and Language 16:4  pp. 408 ff. DOI logo
Saito, Junko
2021. “We’re family”: Japanese Characters’ Categorizations of a Gay Man in a TV Drama. In Linguistic Tactics and Strategies of Marginalization in Japanese,  pp. 143 ff. DOI logo
Yagi, Junichi
2021. Enactingburikko. Applied Pragmatics 3:2  pp. 195 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2024. Bibliography. In Emergent Genders,  pp. 221 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2024. Coda. In Emergent Genders,  pp. 169 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2024. More Than Just Work. In Emergent Genders,  pp. 108 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2024. Doing Business in Japan's Pink Economies. In Emergent Genders,  pp. 52 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2024. Introduction. In Emergent Genders,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2024. Notes. In Emergent Genders,  pp. 179 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2024. Consuming Genders, Fashioning Bodies. In Emergent Genders,  pp. 138 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2024. Alternative Worlds in Akihabara. In Emergent Genders,  pp. 79 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2024. Categories That Bind. In Emergent Genders,  pp. 27 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 6 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

Subjects and metadata

Main BIC Subject

Main BISAC Subject

ONIX Metadata

ONIX 2.1
ONIX 3.0

LoC, MARC XML

U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  2016003592 | Marc record
Mobile Menu Logo with link to supplementary files background Layer 1 prag Twitter_Logo_Blue