Lolita fashion, new media, and cultural hegemony in contemporary Japan

Zi Shuai
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Abstract

This article seeks to present Lolita fashion, which emerged in Japan during the 1980s, as a case study in performed, postmodern identities that are negotiated through consumerism. Opening with a broad stroke introduction to Lolita fashion, with regard to its principal characteristics and its cultural origins, the article attempts to examine the Lolita phenomenon using a variety of theoretical tools and approaches. Firstly, the article considers Lolita fashion in the light of Antonio Gramsci's notion of cultural hegemony. I assert that Lolita fashion might usefully be read as a place of rupture or resistance against the orthodox hegemony of Japan's historically collectivist culture, one that provides its users with an alternate set of social values, particularly when it comes to traditional notions of femininity. Next, I lean, particularly, on Stuart Hall's ideas about modernity, and consider the question of agency, with regard to Lolita fashion, and attempt to locate the impetus for it, not in multinational fashion houses, but the participants of Lolita subculture themselves. In a third section, I go on to problematise that agency, drawing on John Storey's cultural theory work. While it is a commonplace to attribute the rise of a totalising, contemporary mass culture to the digital revolution, Storey locates a potential for new meanings to be generated, not so much within the act of buying - for that is largely determined by the market - but in what he calls the 'production in use' of those goods. The fashion adage, 'It's not what you wear, but how you wear it' seems to ring particularly true in Lolita fashion, and I explore that idea further with an in-depth, textual analysis of a select image. I conclude by considering Lolita fashion's exportation, out of Japan and into a globalised marketplace, and the signification thereof.
洛丽塔时尚、新媒体与当代日本的文化霸权
本文试图呈现20世纪80年代在日本兴起的洛丽塔时尚,作为通过消费主义协商的表演后现代身份的案例研究。以广泛的笔触介绍洛丽塔时尚,关于它的主要特点和它的文化起源,文章试图用各种理论工具和方法来研究洛丽塔现象。首先,本文从葛兰西的文化霸权观出发,对洛丽塔时尚进行了思考。我断言,洛丽塔时尚可以被解读为一种对日本历史上的集体主义文化的正统霸权的决裂或抵抗,这种文化为它的用户提供了一套另类的社会价值观,特别是当它涉及到传统的女性观念时。接下来,我特别倾向于斯图尔特·霍尔关于现代性的观点,并考虑关于洛丽塔时尚的代理问题,并试图找到它的动力,不是在跨国时装公司,而是洛丽塔亚文化的参与者本身。在第三部分,我借鉴约翰·斯托里的文化理论,继续对这种代理提出问题。虽然将一种整体化的当代大众文化的兴起归因于数字革命是一种司空见惯的现象,但Storey发现了一种潜在的新意义的产生,而不是在购买行为中——因为这在很大程度上是由市场决定的——而是在他所谓的“使用生产”中。时尚界的格言“重要的不是你穿什么,而是你怎么穿”在洛丽塔时尚中似乎特别正确,我通过对一幅精选图片进行深入的文本分析,进一步探讨了这一观点。最后,我考虑了洛丽塔时装的出口,走出日本,进入一个全球化的市场,以及它的意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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