Cuteness in Japanese culture
- Kawaii redirects here. For the manufacturer of musical instruments, see Kawai; for the Hawaiian island, see Kauai.
Since the 1970s, cuteness (可愛さ kawaisa?) has become a
prominent aspect of Japanese popular culture, entertainment, clothing, food,
toys,
Prevalence
Cute elements can be found almost everywhere in Japan, from big business to corner markets, national government to ward and town offices.[1][2] Many companies, large and small, use cute mascots to present their wares and services to the public. For example:
- Pikachu, a character from Pokémon, adorns the side of three All Nippon Airways passenger jets
- Conan, protagonist of series Detective Conan
- Asahi Bank used Miffy, a character from a Dutch series of children's picture books, on some of its ATM cards
- Monkichi, a cute monkey character, can be found on the packaging for a line of condoms[3]
- All 47 prefectures have cute mascot characters
- The Japan Post "Yū-Pack" mascot is a stylized mailbox.[4]
- The Japan Post also uses other cute mascot characters, for example on stamps.
- Some police forces in Japan have their own moe mascots, which sometimes adorn the front of koban (police boxes).
Cute merchandise is extremely popular in Japan. The two largest manufacturers of such merchandise are Sanrio (manufacturers of "Hello Kitty") and San-X (manufacturers of "Kogepan", "Nyan Nyan Nyanko" and "Rilakkuma"). This character merchandise is a hit with Japanese children and adults alike.[5][6]
Cute can be also used to describe a specific fashion sense[7][8] of an individual, and generally includes clothing that appears to be made for young children, outside of the size, or clothing that accentuates the cuteness of the individual wearing the clothing. Ruffles and pastel colors are commonly (but not always) featured, and accessories often include toys or bags featuring anime characters.[9]
Perception in Japan
As a cultural phenomenon, cuteness is increasingly accepted in Japan as a part of Japanese culture and national identity. Tomoyuki Sugiyama, author of "Cool Japan" believes that "cuteness" is rooted in Japan's harmony-loving culture, and Nobuyoshi Kurita, a sociology professor at Musashi University in Tokyo, has stated that "cute" is a "magic term" that encompasses everything that's acceptable and desirable in Japan.[10]
On the other hand, the minority of Japanese, those skeptical of cuteness, consider it a sign of an infantile mentality.[10] In particular, Hiroto Murasawa, professor of beauty and culture at Osaka Shoin Women’s University asserts that cuteness is "a mentality that breeds non-assertion ... Individuals who choose to stand out get beaten down."[10]
Influence on other cultures
Cute merchandise and products are especially popular in other parts of east Asia, such as China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea.[11][12] While many of these products are imports from Japan, indigenous creations have also appeared. "Supercute" things have become so synonymous with Japan that many people often mistake non-Japanese creations (Such as the Thailand made Pok-Pong) to be Japanese in origin.[citation needed]
In some Asian and western cultures, the Japanese word for cute (kawaii, 可愛い) has joined a number of other Japanese words borrowed by overseas fans of Japanese pop culture. While the usage is almost entirely limited to the otaku subculture, it has been used by American singer Gwen Stefani, who gave kawaii a brief mention in her Harajuku Girls music video.[13]
The influence of cuteness and manga has also been adopted by several North American businesses.
In the online world, a large group of kawaii based websites, forums, etc, revolve around kawaii culture. In particular, pixels, vectors and scribbles of cute creatures are very popular, and are adopted by other kawaii sites, to be displayed in their "toy box".
See also
- Japanese popular culture
- Japanese fashion
- Kobe Collection
- Beauty
- Chibi
- Bishōjo
- Super deformed
- Cuteness
- Lolita fashion
- Moe (slang)
- Wabi-sabi
- Figure moe zoku
- OS-tan
References
Notes
- ^ See Wired, "Cute Inc." URL accessed April 19, 2006.
- ^ See Business Week, "In Japan, Cute Conquers All".
- ^ Monkichi condoms. URL accessed September 30, 2006.
- ^ See Japan Post site showing mailbox mascot. URL accessed April 19, 2006.
- ^ See Kawaii or cute Japanese products. URL accessed April 19, 2006.
- ^ See SFGate Asian "Pop: How Hello Kitty Came to Rule the World". URL accessed April 19, 2006.
- ^ See The New Yorker "FACT: SHOPPING REBELLION: What the kids want". URL accessed April 19, 2006.
- ^ See Time Asia: "Arts: Kwest For Kawaii". URL accessed April 19, 2006.
- ^ See Wired: "Cute Inc." URL accessed April 19, 2006.
- ^ a b c Quotes and paraphrases from: Yuri Kageyama. "Cuteness a hot-selling commodity in Japan", Associated Press, June 14, 2006.
- ^ See Wired: "Cute Inc." URL accessed April 19, 2006.
- ^ See "Cute is cool in Japan". URL accessed April 19, 2006.
- ^ See Salon.com: "Gwen Stefani neuters Japanese street fashion to create spring's must-have accessory: Giggling geisha!". URL accessed April 19, 2006.
Other references
- Asia Times: The cat who turned kawaii into cash (book review)
- Backwash.com: Grrl Wanders
- Kawaii-Inc.: For cute graphics
- Chanpon: Hello Kitty has no mouth
- The FRUiTS of Japanese Fashion: Reading Resistance on the Streets of Harajuku
- International Herald Tribune: Tokyo's fantasy cafés
- New York Times: The Cute Factor
- Sociologist Sharon Kinsella's analysis of the origins of kawaii
- Taipei Times: How 'kawaii'!
- Time Asia: Young Japan: She's a material girl
- Kawaii Culture (a regular column at Tokyopop)
- UCLA: Anime's 'Transnational Geekdom'
- What is the effect of the Fantabulous Kawaii Gizmos, Wireless Privacy Daemons & Orientalism
- Japanese Cybercultures
- Shiokawa, Kanako. "Cute But Deadly: Women and Violence in Japanese Comics". Themes and Issues in Asian Cartooning: Cute, Cheap, Mad and Sexy. Ed. John A. Lent. Bowling Green, Kentucky: Bowling Green State University Popular Press, 1999. 93–125. ISBN 0-87972-779-9.
- "You are doing burikko!:Censoring/scrutinizing artificers of cute femininity in Japanese," Laura Miller in Gender, and Ideology: Cultural Models and Real People, edited by Janet Shibamoto Smith and Shigeko Okamoto, Oxford University Press, 2004. In Japanese.
- TheAge.Com: "Japan smitten by love of cute"
- Love for cute has Japan engrossed in soul-searching on kitty, beauty, art
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