Variability and multiplicity in the meanings of stereotypical gendered speech in Japanese

Authors

  • Shigeko Okamoto University of California Santa Cruz

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/eap.v1i1.28747

Keywords:

gender, indexicality, language ideology, Japanese

Abstract

Recent research on the use of gendered speech in Japanese has demonstrated extensive within-gender diversity, suggesting that the relationship between linguistic forms and gender is variable, not fixed. While this diversity in use suggests a diversity in interpretation, the latter has not been adequately examined in its own right and deserves closer attention, given that it has important implications for the relationship between linguistic forms and social meanings. To address this gap, this article analyses both native speakers’ metapragmatic comments on the use of gendered linguistic forms and the interpretation of such forms used in situated conversations. It considers how and why forms normatively interpreted as feminine or masculine may be (re)interpreted differently by different persons or in different social contexts. Drawing on the notion of indirect and variable indexicality, I consider how such diverse and multiple interpretations can be accounted for in a theoretically coherent manner.

Author Biography

  • Shigeko Okamoto, University of California Santa Cruz

    Shigeko Okamoto is Professor in the Department of Languages and Applied Linguistics at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her research interests include discourse analysis, sociolinguistics, pragmatics, and Japanese linguistics. She has many publications in these areas, including her co-edited book Japanese Language , Gender, and Ideology: Cultural Models and Real People (Oxford University, 2004) and the forthcoming co-authored book The Social Life of the Japanese Language: Cultural Discourses and Situated Practice (Cambridge University Press, in press).

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Published

2016-04-13

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Okamoto, S. (2016). Variability and multiplicity in the meanings of stereotypical gendered speech in Japanese. East Asian Pragmatics, 1(1), 5-37. https://doi.org/10.1558/eap.v1i1.28747