Accéder au contenu Accéder au menu principal Accéder à la recherche
Accéder au contenu Accéder au menu principal
UQAM logo
Page d'accueil de l'UQAM Étudier à l'UQAM Bottin du personnel Carte du campus Bibliothèques Pour nous joindre

Service des bibliothèques

Portail BiblioFEM*
UQAM logo
Portail BiblioFEM*
  • Bibliographie
  • Accueil
  1. Vitrine des bibliographies
  2. Portail BiblioFEM*
  3. Class S: appropriation of ‘lesbian’ subculture in modern Japanese literature and New Wave cinema
  • À propos
Bibliographie complète

Class S: appropriation of ‘lesbian’ subculture in modern Japanese literature and New Wave cinema

RIS

Format recommandé pour la plupart des logiciels de gestion de références bibliographiques

BibTeX

Format recommandé pour les logiciels spécialement conçus pour BibTeX

Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteur/contributeur
  • Shamoon, Deborah (Auteur)
Titre
Class S: appropriation of ‘lesbian’ subculture in modern Japanese literature and New Wave cinema
Résumé
In the 1920s in Japan, girls attending single-sex secondary schools developed a girls’ culture (shōjo bunka) or subculture to insulate themselves temporarily from the pressures of patriarchal society. Part of this subculture was a practice called s kankei (s or sister relationships), also called Class S, which were same-sex romantic attachments between classmates, condoned at the time as a temporary practice relationship that would end upon graduation, followed by an arranged marriage. Although s relationships were not ‘lesbian’ in the contemporary sense, literature and film created by men in the 1920s through the 1960s appropriated aspects of girls’ culture, including exploitative representation of female homosexuality. One example is Manji (Quicksand, 1928) by Tanizaki Jun’ichirō, which depicts an s relationship as lurid and perverse. Kawabata Yasunari plagiarized from his female disciple Nakazato Tsuneko in order to publish the most popular Class S novel of the era, Otome no minato (Harbor of Girls, 1937). Kawabata also included exploitative scenes of female homosexuality in his novel Utsukushisa to kanashimi to (Beauty and Sadness, 1963). Both Tanizaki’s and Kawabata’s novels were made into films by New Wave directors, Manji in 1964 by Masumura Yasuzō and Beauty and Sadness in 1965 by Shinoda Masahiro, and featured the first depictions of ‘lesbianism’ in Japanese film. Although these films reinscribe the male gaze, they helped inspire a nascent gay culture and opened the way for more authentic gay cinema. This essay recenters girls’ culture in modern Japanese literature and film, and discusses the variable meaning of female homosexuality for different audiences.
Publication
Cultural Studies
Volume
35
Numéro
1
Pages
27-43
Date
2021
Langue
Anglais
DOI
10.1080/09502386.2020.1844259
ISSN
0950-2386
Titre abrégé
Class S
URL
https://uqam-bib.on.worldcat.org/oclc/8871107317
Référence
Shamoon, Deborah. (2021). Class S: appropriation of ‘lesbian’ subculture in modern Japanese literature and New Wave cinema. Cultural Studies, 35(1), 27‑43. https://doi.org/10.1080/09502386.2020.1844259
Approches et analyses
  • Systèmes d'oppressions
    • Discours dominant
    • Patriarcat
Discipline
  • Arts
    • Études littéraires
Régions géographiques
  • Asie
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/bibliofem/bibliographie/QEJMVRGT

UQAM - Université du Québec à Montréal

  • Portail BiblioFEM*
  • bibliotheques@uqam.ca

Accessibilité Web