2014
DOI: 10.1111/gwao.12050
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Popular Culture and Workplace Gendering among Varieties of Capitalism: Working Women and their Representation in Japanese Manga

Abstract: Female empowerment is a prerequisite for a just and sustainable developed society. Being the most developed non-western country, Japan offers an instructive window onto concerns about gender worldwide. Although overall gender equality is advancing in Japan, difficulties remain, especially in achieving equality in the workplace. We draw on theories of ontological commitment and the psychology of fiction to critically analyse the role of popular culture -in this case manga -in the reproduction of gender inequali… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
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“…Others in high-intensity occupations develop extreme personalities which can alter and confuse personal and social features such as gender norms, at least temporarily. In the Japanese manga Hataraki-man (‘Workaholic man’), a female journalist turns on her ‘man switch’ to go into ‘hyper male work mode’ when deadlines loom (Matanle et al, 2014: 482–3). Extreme/normal or edgework thus overlaps with contemporary debates into the ‘post-human’ (Braidotti, 2013), as distinctions between human, technology and animal species are blurred or erased.…”
Section: Extreme As Storytelling Trope and Memementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Others in high-intensity occupations develop extreme personalities which can alter and confuse personal and social features such as gender norms, at least temporarily. In the Japanese manga Hataraki-man (‘Workaholic man’), a female journalist turns on her ‘man switch’ to go into ‘hyper male work mode’ when deadlines loom (Matanle et al, 2014: 482–3). Extreme/normal or edgework thus overlaps with contemporary debates into the ‘post-human’ (Braidotti, 2013), as distinctions between human, technology and animal species are blurred or erased.…”
Section: Extreme As Storytelling Trope and Memementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reducing complex interactions into binary oppositions, including male/female, masculine/feminine reifies social relationships into concrete 'ontological representations of reality' (Collinson, 2005(Collinson, , p. 1421, as women leaders may hold formal power yet still be viewed as 'out of place' (Mavin & Grandy, 2016, p. 1096. As Mantale, Ishiguro & McCann (2014) observe in a study of working women's representation in Japanese Manga, popular culture plays a role in processes of ontological commitment that reproduce gender inequality in the workplace. Muhr (2011) notes the difficulty when interrogating women's leadership of escaping 'the essentialism underlying binary thinking', and suggests the need to think 'in terms of multiplicity' (p.349).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Manga has been instrumental in building a shared cultural space among Japanese readers, covering virtually all topics imaginable, including sports, war, corporate life, child rearing, sex, cooking, usury, and medicine. Beyond entertainment, manga plays a wide array of roles in Japanese societyfrom a teaching tool, an information source, a behaviour guide, social commentary, an agent of socialization (Ito 2005), to a vehicle for government policy (Matanle, Ishiguro, and McCann 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Traditional gender perceptions manifest more conspicuously in boys' and men's manga, in which female characters use a stereotypical feminine speech style more frequently than has been reported for natural speech (Unser-Schutz 2015). Working women in best-selling men's manga are typically portrayed as either excluded from careers or negatively constructed as being too masculine (Matanle, Ishiguro, and McCann 2014). Stereotypical gendering may also occur on the creator's side, as manga authors are likely to draw for audiences of their own gender.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%