First- and second-person pronouns have been one of the centerpieces of the literature on language and gender differences in Japanese (Shibamoto Smith 2003). Most of our understandings of real (empirical) pronominal use comes from investigations of female speakers of standard Japanese. Our understandings of how dialect speakers and/or men use pronominal forms in daily linguistic practice are not well informed. This article undertakes an investigation of Japanese men’s uses of pronominal forms; each participant was born and reared in the Kansai (western) area of Japan and uses a dialect variety of Japanese (Hanshinkan Dialect). Literature which addresses pronominal usage in Japanese indicates that these forms are risky since they always serve to position speaker and hearer in specific ways relative to one another; as such, pronouns are something to be avoided. The findings of this paper indicate that pronouns are used by Japanese men; however the uses are contextually governed and have little to do with delineating speaker from hearer and have more to do with specific conversational goals.
Abe, Hideko (2004) Lesbian bar talk in Shinjuku, Tokyo. In Shigeko Okamoto and Janet Shibamoto Smith (eds.), Japanese language, gender, and ideology: Cultural models and real people. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 205 - 221.
Goodwin, Charles (1981) Conversational organization. New York: Academic Press. BoP
Hinds, John (1982) Ellipsis in Japanese. Edmonton, Canada: Linguistic Research. BoP
Hirayama, Teruo (1997) Osaka-fu no kotoba. Tokyo: Meiji Shoin.
Ide, Sachiko (1979) Onna no kotoba otoko no kotoba. Tokyo: Nihon Keizai Tsuushinsha.
Ide, Sachiko (1991) How and why do women speak more politely in Japanese. In Sachiko Ide and Naomi Hanaoka McGloin (eds.), Aspects of Japanese women's language. Tokyo: Kurosio, pp. 63-79. BoP
Ide, Sachiko (1993) Sekai no joseigo, nihon no joseigo (women's language of the world, women's language of Japan). Nihongogaku 121: 4-12.
Ide, Sachiko (2003) Women's language as a group identity marker in Japanese. In Hellinger, Marlis and Bussmann Hadumod (eds.), Gender across languages: The linguistic representation of women and me. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company 31: 227- 238.
Inoue, Miyako (1996) The political economy of gender and language in Japan. St. Louis, MO: Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, Washington University.
Inoue, Miyako (2002) Gender, language, and modernity: Toward an effective history of Japanese women's language. American Ethnologist 29.2: 392-422.
Inoue, Miyako (2006) Vicarious language: Gender and linguistic modernity in Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Kanemaru, Fumi (1997) Ninshoo daimeshi, koshoo. In Sachiko Ide (ed.), Joseigo no sekai. Tokyo: Meiji Shoin, pp. 33-41.
Kurokawa, Shozo (1972) Japanese terms of address: Some usages of the first and second person pronouns. Journal of Japanese Linguistics 11: 228-238.
Lunsing, Wim, and Claire Maree (2004) Shifting speakers: Negotiating reference in relation to sexuality and gender. In Shigeko Okamoto and Janet Shibamoto Smith (eds.), Japanese language, gender, and ideology: Cultural models and real people. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 92-112.
Martin, Samuel (1975) A reference grammar of Japanese. Tokyo: Charles E. Tuttle Company.
Matsumoto, Yoshiko (1989) Politeness and conversational universals - observations from Japanese. Multilingua 8.2/3: 207-221.
Matsumoto, Yoshiko (2002) Gender identity and the presentation of self in Japanese. In Mary Rose Sarah Benor, Devyani Sharma, Julie Sweetland, and Qing Shang (eds.), Gendered practices in language. Stanford: CSLI, pp. 339-354.
Maynard, Senko (1997) Japanese communication: Language and thought in context. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. BoP.
Miyake, Yoshimi (1995) A dialect in the face of the standard: A Japanese case study.
Proceedings of the Twenty-First Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistic Society: General Session and Parasession on Historical Issues in Sociolinguistics/Social Issues in Historical Linguistics
, pp. 217-225.
Miyazaki, Ayumi (2004) Japanese junior high school girls' and boys' first person pronoun use and their social world. In Shigeko Okamoto and Janet (Shibamoto)Smith (eds.), Japanese language, gender, and ideology: Cultural models and real people. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 256-274.
Ochs, Elinor (1992) Indexing gender. In Alessandro Duranti and Charles Goodwin (eds.), Rethinking context: Language as an interactive phenomenon. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 335-358.
Ogawa, Naoko, and Janet (Shibamoto)Smith (1997) The gendering of the gay male sex class: A preliminary case study based on rasen no sobyoo. In Anna Livia and Kira Hall (eds.), Queerly phrased: Language, gender, and sexuality. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 402-415.
Okamoto, Shigeko, and Shie Sato (1992) Less feminine speech among young Japanese females. In Kira Hall, Mary Bucholtz and Birch Moonwomon (eds.), Locating power: Proceedings of the 2nd Berkeley women & language conference. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 478-488.
Peng, Fei (1973) La parole of Japanese pronouns. Language Sciences 251: 36-39.
Reynolds, Akiba Katsue (1991) Female speakers of Japanese in transition. In Sachiko Ide and Naomi Hanaoka McGloin (eds.), Aspects of Japanese women's language. Tokyo: Kurosio, pp. 129-146.
Roberson, James, and Nobue Suzuki (eds.) (2003) Men and masculinities in contemporary Japan: Dislocating the salaryman doxa. New York: RoutledgeCurzon.
Sacks, Harvey, Emmanuel Schegloff, and Gail Jefferson (1974) A simplest systematics for the organization of turn-taking in conversation. Language 501: 696-735. BoP
Shibamoto, Janet (1985) Japanese women's language. London: Academic Press: Harcourt, Brace, and Janovich. BoP
Shibamoto Smith, Janet (2003) Gendered structures in Japanese. In Hellinger Marlis and Hadumod Bussmann (eds.), Gender across languages: The linguistic representation of women and men. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company 31: 201-225.
Shibatani, Masayoshi (1990) The languages of Japan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Silverstein, Michael (1985) Language and the culture of gender: At the intersection of structure, usage, and ideology. In Elizabeth Mertz and Richard Parmentier (eds.), Semiotic mediation. Orlando/London: Academic Press, pp. 219-259.
Sturtz, Cindi (2001) Danseigo da zo! Japanese men's language: Stereotypes, realities, and ideologies. Unpublished Dissertation. Davis, University of California at Davis.
SturtzSreetharan, Cindi (2004a) Japanese men's conversational stereotypes and realities: Conversations from the kanto and kansai regions. In Shigeko Okamoto and Janet Shibamoto Smith (eds.), Japanese language, gender, and ideology: Cultural models and real people. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 275-289.
SturtzSreetharan, Cindi (2004b) Students, sarariiman (pl.), and seniors: Japanese men's use of "manly" speech register. Language in Society 331: 81-107.
SturtzSreetharan, Cindi (2006) Gentlemanly gender? Japanese men's use of clause-final politeness in casual conversations. Journal of Sociolinguistics 10.1: 70-92.
Sugimoto, Yoshio (1997) An introduction to Japanese society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Sunaoshi, Yukako (2004) Farm women's professional discourse in Ibaraki. In Shigeko Okamoto and Janet (Shibamoto)Smith (eds.), Japanese language, gender, and ideology. New York and Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press, pp. 187-204.
Suzuki, Takao (1978) Words in context: A Japanese perspective on language and culture. Tokyo: Kodansha.
Takeuchi, Lone (1999) The structure and history of Japanese: From yamatokotoba to nihongo. London/New York: Longman.
Wada, Minoru (1985) Sasameyuki no gengo seikatsu. In Munemasa Tokugawa (eds.), Kamigata kotoba no sekai. Tokyo: Musashino Shoin, pp. 7-40.
Wada, Minoru, and Ryooji Kamata (1992) Hyogo no hogen, rigen. Kobe: Kobe Shinbun Sogoo Shuppan Sentaa.
Cited by (17)
Cited by 17 other publications
Miyazaki, Ayumi
2023. Masculine pronouns are not only for boys: Japanese girls breaking traditional relationships between gender and language in a school context. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2023:284 ► pp. 131 ff.
Miyazaki, Ayumi
2023. Introduction: ideologies of contact and space in Japan: a theoretical expansion of language ideological work. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2023:284 ► pp. 1 ff.
2022. Fat Is All My Fault: Globalized Metathemes of Body Self‐blame. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 36:1 ► pp. 5 ff.
Ho, Michelle H. S.
2020. Queer and normal:dansō(female-to-male crossdressing) lives and politics in contemporary Tokyo. Asian Anthropology 19:2 ► pp. 102 ff.
Ishino, Mika & Yusuke Okada
2018. Constructing students’ deontic status by use of alternative recognitionals for student reference. Classroom Discourse 9:2 ► pp. 95 ff.
Saito, Junko
2018. “Sarariiman” and the Performance of Masculinities at Work: An Analysis of Interactions at Business Meetings at a Multinational Corporation in Japan. In Japanese at Work, ► pp. 97 ff.
Zawiszová, Halina
2018. On ´doing friendship´ in and through talk: Exploring conversational interactions of Japanese young people,
2017. Gender Identity in a Second Language: The Use of First Person Pronouns by Male Learners of Japanese. Journal of Language, Identity & Education 16:2 ► pp. 94 ff.
SturtzSreetharan, Cindi
2017. Resignifying the Japanese father: Mediatization, commodification, and dialect. Language & Communication 53 ► pp. 45 ff.
Occhi, Debra J., Cindi L. SturtzSreetharan & Janet S. Shibamoto-Smith
2010. Finding Mr Right: New Looks at Gendered Modernity in Japanese Televised Romances. Japanese Studies 30:3 ► pp. 409 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 21 september 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.