Men and Masculinities in Contemporary Japan: Dislocating the Salaryman DoxaJames E. Roberson, Nobue Suzuki Psychology Press, 2003 - 222 pages This book is the first comprehensive account of the changing role of men and the construction of masculinity in contemporary Japan. The book moves beyond the stereotype of the Japanese white-collar businessman to explore the diversity of identities and experiences that may be found among men in contemporary Japan, including those versions of masculinity which are marginalized and subversive. The book makes a significant contribution to our understanding of contemporary Japanese society and identity. |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
What masculinity? Transgender practices among Japanese men | 20 |
Male beauty work in Japan | 37 |
Female masculinity and fantasy spaces transcending genders in the Takarazuka Theatre and Japanese popular culture | 59 |
The burning of men masculinities and the nation in Japanese popular song | 77 |
Of love and the marriage market masculinity politics and FilipinaJapanese marriages in Japan | 91 |
Can a real man live for his family? ikigai and masculinity in todays Japan | 109 |
Japanese workingclass masculinities marginalized complicity | 126 |
When pillars evaporate structuring masculinity on the Japanese margins | 144 |
Regendering batterers domestic violence and mens movements | 162 |
HIV risk and the impermeability of the male body representations and realities of gay men in Japan | 180 |
Balancing fatherhood and work emergence of diverse masculinities in contemporary Japan | 198 |
217 | |
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activities AIDS anal sex Asahi Shinbun batterers become behaviour Berkeley body California Press cent Chapter childcare Connell construction contemporary Japan contexts corporate culture day labourers discourse discussed domestic violence dominant drag queens economic employees enka esute experiences eyebrow fans fathers feel female masculinity feminine Filipinas gender hair hegemonic masculinity heterosexual husbands ibid ideology ikigai Ikujiren images interviewed Ishii-Kuntz Japanese society Japanese women Kazoku Kurama lesbian lives London Lunsing manga marginalized marriage married masculine identities masculinity in Japan men's middle-class Nakamura Nihon otoko otoko-yaku parental leave participants performance political popular practices Princess Knight relations relationships representations risk Roberson role Routledge salaryman salons sex-change surgery sexual Shintani Metals Shobō shōjo shōjo manga social song Studies Suzuki Takarazuka Theatre Terami Tokyo transgender University of California University Press welfare white-collar wife wives woman workers working-class workplace York yoseba young