Please take her as your wife

Rika Ito
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This article investigates linguistic and visual representations of the Ainu, the indigenous people of northern Japan, in Satoru Noda’s popular televised Japanese anime Golden Kamuy (GK). The study employs multimodal analysis, focusing on content, context, characters, and perspectives related to the deployment of the Ainu language using the perspectives of raciolinguistics, coloniality, and intersectionality, to examine GK’s representations of Ainu regarding two Japanese national discourses on race: the current discourse of “ethnic harmony” (or multiculturalism) and Ainu as a dying race, popularized in the early 20th century. It argues that GK unintentionally constructs a sanitized Ainu-Japanese relationship that epitomizes the discourse of ethnic harmony by erasing Japan’s colonial past. Simultaneously, GK reproduces Ainu as a dying race discourse by contrasting a young bilingual Ainu co-protagonist and her monolingual grandmother. The article discusses how advanced/backward distinctions that the Japanese elites appropriated from the 19th-century colonial discourse are reinscribed in this anime with a modern twist. It also advocates our need to raise critical questions about language, race, and power for a just society in various contexts, including popular media.
请娶她为妻
本文研究了野田聪(Satoru Noda)的热门电视动画片《金色卡姆伊》(Golden Kamuy,GK)中对日本北部原住民阿伊努人的语言和视觉表现。本研究采用多模态分析法,重点关注内容、语境、人物以及与使用阿伊努语相关的视角,运用种族语言学、殖民性和交叉性视角,研究 GK 在两种日本国家种族话语中对阿伊努人的表述:当前的 "种族和谐"(或多元文化主义)话语和 20 世纪初流行的将阿伊努人视为濒临灭绝的种族的话语。研究认为,《GK》无意中构建了一种经过净化的阿伊努人与日本人的关系,这种关系通过抹去日本的殖民历史而成为种族和谐话语的缩影。同时,《GK》通过对比年轻的双语阿伊努族共同主人公和她的单语祖母,再现了阿伊努族作为一个濒临灭绝的种族的话语。文章讨论了日本精英从 19 世纪殖民话语中挪用的先进/落后的区别是如何在这部动画片中以现代的方式重现的。文章还主张,我们需要在包括大众媒体在内的各种环境中提出有关语言、种族和权力的批判性问题,以建立一个公正的社会。
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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