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Beschreibung
In Emergent Genders, Michelle H. S. Ho traces the genders manifesting alongside Japanese popular culture in Akihabara, an area in Tokyo renowned for the fandom and consumption of anime, manga, and games. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in jos¿ and dans¿ cafe-and-bars, establishments where male-to-female and female-to-male crossdressing is prevalent, Ho shows how their owners, employees, and customers creatively innovate what she calls emergent genders-new practices, categories, and ways of being stemming from the simultaneous fracturing, contestations, and (re)imaginations of older forms of gender and sexual variance in Japan. Such emergent genders initiate new markets for alternative categories of expression and subjectivity to thrive in a popular cultural hub like Akihabara instead of Tokyo's gay and lesbian neighborhood of Shinjuku Ni-ch¿me. By rethinking identitarian models of gender and sexuality, reconfiguring the significance of capitalism for trans studies and queer theory, and decentering theoretical frameworks incubated in a predominantly United States academic context, Ho offers new ways of examining how trans and gender nonconforming individuals may survive and flourish under capitalism.
In Emergent Genders, Michelle H. S. Ho traces the genders manifesting alongside Japanese popular culture in Akihabara, an area in Tokyo renowned for the fandom and consumption of anime, manga, and games. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in jos¿ and dans¿ cafe-and-bars, establishments where male-to-female and female-to-male crossdressing is prevalent, Ho shows how their owners, employees, and customers creatively innovate what she calls emergent genders-new practices, categories, and ways of being stemming from the simultaneous fracturing, contestations, and (re)imaginations of older forms of gender and sexual variance in Japan. Such emergent genders initiate new markets for alternative categories of expression and subjectivity to thrive in a popular cultural hub like Akihabara instead of Tokyo's gay and lesbian neighborhood of Shinjuku Ni-ch¿me. By rethinking identitarian models of gender and sexuality, reconfiguring the significance of capitalism for trans studies and queer theory, and decentering theoretical frameworks incubated in a predominantly United States academic context, Ho offers new ways of examining how trans and gender nonconforming individuals may survive and flourish under capitalism.
Über den Autor
Michelle H. S. Ho
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. Tracing Emergent Genders 1
1. Categories That Bind: Gender Innovations and Their Sticky Relations to Capital 27
2. Doing Business in Japan’s Pink Economies: Enacting Home, Family, and Alternative Forms of Belonging 52
3. Alternative Worlds in Akihabara: The Rise of Contemporary Jos¿ and Dans¿ Cultures 79
4. More Than Just Work: Trans and Nonbinary Employees Capitalizing on Their Labor 108
5. Consuming Genders, Fashioning Bodies: Thinking Style and Beauty in Contemporary Jos¿ and Dans¿ Cultures 138
Coda. Living Otherwise in the New Normal 169
Notes 179
Bibliography 221
Index
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2025
Genre: Importe, Soziologie
Rubrik: Wissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: Einband - flex.(Paperback)
ISBN-13: 9781478031376
ISBN-10: 1478031379
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Ho, Michelle H. S.
Hersteller: Duke University Press
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de
Maße: 229 x 152 x 17 mm
Von/Mit: Michelle H. S. Ho
Erscheinungsdatum: 28.01.2025
Gewicht: 0,462 kg
Artikel-ID: 129084867

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