破坏性别化类型:日本漫画中的歌舞伎

Olga Antononoka
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引用次数: 0

摘要

根据杰奎琳·伯恩特、托马斯·拉玛尔和其他评论家的说法,漫画是一种高度参与的媒体形式。充满活力的人物叙事和情节的创造性不一致鼓励读者重新理解文本,创造新内容并展开超越阅读的活动(如粉丝艺术和CosPlay)。最近流行的关于日本传统艺术的漫画——例如歌舞伎——进一步扩大了与漫画和其他流行媒体的潜在互动,包括(重新)发现日本传统文化。例如田中昭夫和宫原大卫的《歌舞伎》(Morning 2008-2011),平川绫的《国崎出云之集》(Weekly Shōnen Sunday 2010-2014)以及其他各种漫画、动画和轻小说都是这种趋势的例证。因此,《火影忍者》和《海贼王》等有影响力的系列电影都标榜改编为超级歌舞伎舞台剧。此外,Jessica Bauwens-Sugimoto观察到当代漫画的主题和风格的过度延伸如何进一步扭曲了作为漫画产业基础的性别类型的概念。在这种情况下,歌舞伎剧场作为一个主题,采用了各种性别流动的人物和情况。出于这个目的,歌舞伎漫画利用了跨类型的叙事和风格修辞,从公然模仿借来的修辞,到致敬,再到隐蔽的包含。以歌舞伎漫画为例,我将探讨一个更大的趋势,即在男性叙事中使用女性类型的元素,从而扩大目标读者群。我的论文探讨了促进跨体裁漫画阅读的特定机制,我也探讨了读者之间的小说批判潜力、主题和风格交流可能带来的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Undermining the gendered genre: Kabuki in manga
According to Jaqueline Berndt, Thomas LaMarre, and other critics, manga is a highly participatory media form. Narratives with vibrant characters and creative inconsistences in the plotline encourage the reader to recontextualise the text, create new contents and unfold activities which go beyond reading (such as fan art and CosPlay). Recent popularity of manga about Japanese traditional arts – for example, Kabuki – further expanded the potential interaction with manga and other popular media to include (re)discovering traditional Japanese culture. Examples, such as Kabukumon by Tanaka Akio and David Miyahara (Morning 2008-2011), or Kunisaki Izumo no jijō by Hirakawa Aya (Weekly Shōnen Sunday 2010-2014) and a variety of other manga, anime and light novels exemplify this tendency. Consequently, influential franchises, such as Naruto and One Piece boast adaptations as Super Kabuki stage-plays. Furthermore, Jessica Bauwens-Sugimoto observes how thematic and stylistic overreaching in contemporary manga further distort the notions of the gendered genre that lays at the foundation of the manga industry. In this case, Kabuki theatre as a theme employs a variety of gender fluid characters and situations. For this purpose, Kabuki manga utilise cross-genre narrative and stylistic tropes, from overtly parodying borrowed tropes, to homage, and covert inclusions. On the example of Kabuki-manga I will explore a larger trend in manga to employ elements of female genres in male narratives, thus expanding the target readership. My paper explores specific mechanism that facilitates reading manga cross-genre, I also inquire what novel critical potential thematic and stylistic exchange between audiences may entail.
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