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Gender differences in Japanese

The Japanese language has some words and some grammatical constructions associated with men or boys, while others are associated with women or girls. Such differences are sometimes called "gendered language".[1] In Japanese, speech patterns associated with women are referred to as onna kotoba (女言葉, "women's words") or joseigo (女性語, "women's language"), and those associated with men are referred to as danseigo (男性語, "men's language").[2]

In general, the words and speech patterns associated with men are perceived as rough, vulgar, or abrupt, while those associated with women are considered more polite, more deferential, or "softer". Some linguists consider the description of "rough–soft continuum" more accurate than the description of "male–female continuum". For example, Eleanor Harz Jorden in Japanese: The Spoken Language refers to the styles as "blunt/gentle", rather than male/female.[3][verification needed]

There are no gender differences in written Japanese (except in quoted speech), and almost no differences in polite speech (teineigo).[4]

Conventional women's speech edit

The word onnarashii (女らしい), which is usually translated as "ladylike" or "feminine," refers to the behaviour expected of a typical Japanese woman in a customary scene. As well as behaving in particular ways, being onnarashii means conforming to particular styles of speech. Some of the features of women's speech include speaking in a higher register, using more polite forms and using polite speech or honorifics in more situations, and referring to themselves and those whom they address more formally.[5][6]

Some linguistic features commonly associated with women include: omission of the copula da, the use of first person pronouns such as watashi or atashi among others, use of feminine sentence-final particles such as wa, na no, kashira, and mashō, and the more frequent use of the honorific prefixes o- and go-.[5]

Actual language used by Japanese-speaking women differs from these ideals. Such onnarashii speech is a social norm that institutions such as education and media encourage women to adopt. Similarly, these forms may be prescribed for women learners by Japanese textbooks and other materials. There are, however, various deviations from these norms in conversation.[5]

Although Japanese women may not follow the gender norm in speech, some linguistic studies indicate that Japanese women tend to use more honorific language than men do, which reinforces the idea of onnarashii and conventional gender roles.[7]

Conventional men's speech edit

Just as there are modes of speaking and behaviour that have sometimes been considered intrinsically feminine, there are also those that are considered otokorashii (男らしい, "manly" or "masculine"). Based on men's reports of their own speech, as well as prescriptive advice for language use, men's language is thought of as using fewer polite forms, distinct pronouns and sentence-final particles, and some reduced vowels.[8]

Some words associated with men's speech include: the informal da in place of the copula desu, first person pronouns such as ore and boku, and sentence-final particles such as yo, ze, zo, and kana.[5] Masculine speech also features less frequent use of honorific prefixes and fewer aizuchi response tokens.[9]

Research on Japanese men's speech shows greater use of "neutral" forms, forms not strongly associated with masculine or feminine speech, than is seen in Japanese women's speech.[9]

Some studies of conversation between Japanese men and women show neither gender taking a more dominant position in interaction. Men, however, tend to show a "self-oriented conversation style", telling stories and expressing their expertise on topics being discussed more than is typical of women in these studies.[10]

In modern society edit

Since the late twentieth century observers have noted that individual Japanese men and women do not necessarily speak in the ways attributed to their gender. Scholars have described considerable variation within each gender; some individuals use these characteristics of gendered speech, while others do not.[5] Upper-class women who did not conform to conventional expectations of gendered speech were sometimes criticized for failing to maintain so-called "traditional Japanese culture".[5]

In the LGBT community edit

Okama entertainers and onē kotoba edit

Another recent phenomenon influencing gender norms in speech is the popularity of okama (おかま) entertainers, typically men who enact very feminine speech, dress, and other gender markers. The word okama originally referred to feminine male homosexuals, but its usage has expanded to refer to masculine gay men, male cross-dressers, and trans women, among other uses.[11][12] Entertainers who identify as okama sometimes use a form of speech called onē kotoba (オネエ言葉), literally "older sister speech" but with the word onē ("older sister") used to denote an effeminate man, a speaking style that combines the formal aspects of women's speech described above with blunt or crude words and topics.[13] For example:

  • あたし 今 カレー 食ったら 下痢 だ わ。
Atashi ima karē kuttara geri da wa.
"If I ate curry now, I'd get diarrhea."

The pronoun atashi and the sentence-final da wa is typical of women's speech, while the verb kuttara is typical of men's speech and the topic itself is very blunt.[13]

Hideko Abe suggests that onē kotoba originated during the Shōwa era among sex workers known as danshō (男娼), literally "male prostitutes", who adopted feminine speech, wore women's clothing, and often referred to themselves as women.[14] Celebrities and tarento who use onē kotoba include Akihiro Miwa, Shōgo Kariyazaki, IKKO, Kaba-chan, and the twin brothers Osugi and Peeco.[14] In one instance, two lesbian users of onē kotoba were interviewed by Claire Maree, who reported that they were characterized as onna-onē (女オネエ), or "female queens" by their peers. Maree argues that they were attempting to avoid both heteronormative femininity and stereotypes of lesbians as masculine.[15]

Onabe and transgender male speakers edit

The word onabe (おなべ), although it originally referred to masculine lesbians and female cross-dressers, has evolved to include trans men.[11][12][16] Onabe hosts interviewed in the 1995 documentary Shinjuku Boys use a variety of gendered markers in their speech that are traditionally considered feminine or masculine. One speaker exclusively uses the reflexive pronoun jibun (自分) as a gender-neutral first-person pronoun but also utilizes ending particles like na no, while another uses the first-person pronoun ore but does not consider themself a man or a woman.[17] Abe further notes that two onabe included in a round table discussion in the bisexual and lesbian magazine Anise used jibun as a first-person pronoun, while trans men preferred boku.[14]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Okamoto, Shigeko; Shibamoto Smith, Janet S. (2004). "Introduction". Japanese Language, Gender, and Ideology: Cultural Models and Real People. Oxford University Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-19-516617-0.
  2. ^ Okamoto, Shigeko (2013). "Variability in societal norms for Japanese women's speech: Implications for linguistic politeness". Multilingua. 32 (2): 203–223. doi:10.1515/multi-2013-0010.
  3. ^ Jorden, Eleanor Harz; Noda, Mari (1987). Japanese: The Spoken Language. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-03834-7.
  4. ^ David, Oana (2009). Teineigo and style-mixing: Formality variation in the interview register and application of conversation analysis theory (PDF) (Master of Sciences). University of Oxford. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Siegal, Meryl; Okamoto, Shigeko (2003). "Toward reconceptualizing the teaching and learning of gendered speech styles in Japanese as a Foreign Language". Japanese Language and Literature. 37 (1): 49–66. doi:10.2307/3594875. JSTOR 3594875.
  6. ^ Kazuko, Ashizawa (1998). Mangajin's Basic Japanese Through Comics. Weatherhill. ISBN 0-8348-0452-2.
  7. ^ Tanaka, Lidia (2004). Gender, Language and Culture: A Study of Japanese Television Interview Discourse. John Benjamins Publishing. ISBN 978-90-272-3079-9.
  8. ^ Sturtz Sreetharan, Cindi (2004). "Japanese men's linguistic stereotypes and realities". In Shigeko Okamoto and Janet Shibamoto Smith (ed.). Japanese Language, Gender, and Ideology. Oxford. ISBN 0-19-516617-5.
  9. ^ a b Sturtz Sreetharan, Cindi (2004). "Students, sarariiman (pl.), and seniors: Japanese men's use of ′manly′ speech register". Language in Society. 33 (1). doi:10.1017/S0047404504031045. ISSN 0047-4045. S2CID 145516163.
  10. ^ Itakura, Hiroko; Tsui, Amy B. M. (2004). "Gender and conversational dominance in Japanese conversation". Language in Society. 33 (2). doi:10.1017/S0047404504332033. hdl:10397/7638. ISSN 0047-4045. S2CID 55161059.
  11. ^ a b Wim Lunsing (2005). "The politics of okama and onabe". In Mark McLelland and Romit Dasgupta (ed.). Genders, Transgenders and Sexualities in Japan. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-26058-4.
  12. ^ a b McLelland, Mark (January 2000). "Male Homosexuality and Popular Culture in Modern Japan". Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in the Asian Context (3).
  13. ^ a b Wim Lunsing; Claire Maree (2004). "Shifting speakers: Negotiating reference in relation to sexuality and gender". In Shigeko Okamoto and Janet Shibamoto Smith (ed.). Japanese Language, Gender, and Ideology. Oxford. ISBN 0-19-516617-5.
  14. ^ a b c Abe, Hideko (2010-03-15). Queer Japanese: Gender and Sexual Identities through Linguistic Practices. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-10616-1.
  15. ^ Maree, C. (2008-09-24), Martin, Fran; Jackson, Peter; McLelland, Mark; Yue, Audrey (eds.), "Grrrl-Queens - Onee-kotoba and the Negotiation of Heterosexist Gender Norms and Lesbo(homo)phobic Stereotypes in Japanese", AsiaPacifiQueer: Rethinking Genders and Sexualities, University of Illinois Press, pp. 67–84, hdl:11343/29045, ISBN 978-0-252-03307-0
  16. ^ Abe, Hideko (2015-04-20), "Onabe", in Bolin, Anne; Whelehan, Patricia (eds.), The International Encyclopedia of Human Sexuality, Oxford, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pp. 831–860, doi:10.1002/9781118896877.wbiehs316, ISBN 978-1-118-89687-7, retrieved 2022-12-26
  17. ^ Maree, Claire (August 2003). "Ore wa ore dakara ['Because I'm me']: A study of gender and language in the documentary Shinjuku Boys". Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in the Asian Context (9).

Further reading edit

  • Cherry, Kittredge; Kurihara, Yoko; Nakanishi, Kiyomi (1995). 日本語は女をどう表現してきたか (Womansword: What Japanese Words Say About Women) (in Japanese). Benesse. ISBN 4-8288-5728-1.
  • Graddol, David; Joan Swann (1990). Gender Voices. Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 0-631-13734-3.
  • Sapir, Edward (1958). Culture, language and personality: Selected essays. University of California Press.
  • Schonfeld, Alexander (1999). . Archived from the original on 2010-09-22. Retrieved 2005-09-09.
  • Smith, Phillip M. (1979). "Sex Markers in Speech". Social Markers in Speech. London: Cambridge University Press.
  • Tannen, Deborah (1990). You Just Don't Understand: Women and Men in Conversation. William Morrow & Co. ISBN 0-688-07822-2.

gender, differences, japanese, japanese, language, some, words, some, grammatical, constructions, associated, with, boys, while, others, associated, with, women, girls, such, differences, sometimes, called, gendered, language, japanese, speech, patterns, assoc. The Japanese language has some words and some grammatical constructions associated with men or boys while others are associated with women or girls Such differences are sometimes called gendered language 1 In Japanese speech patterns associated with women are referred to as onna kotoba 女言葉 women s words or joseigo 女性語 women s language and those associated with men are referred to as danseigo 男性語 men s language 2 In general the words and speech patterns associated with men are perceived as rough vulgar or abrupt while those associated with women are considered more polite more deferential or softer Some linguists consider the description of rough soft continuum more accurate than the description of male female continuum For example Eleanor Harz Jorden in Japanese The Spoken Language refers to the styles as blunt gentle rather than male female 3 verification needed There are no gender differences in written Japanese except in quoted speech and almost no differences in polite speech teineigo 4 Contents 1 Conventional women s speech 2 Conventional men s speech 3 In modern society 3 1 In the LGBT community 3 1 1 Okama entertainers and one kotoba 3 1 2 Onabe and transgender male speakers 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingConventional women s speech editThe word onnarashii 女らしい which is usually translated as ladylike or feminine refers to the behaviour expected of a typical Japanese woman in a customary scene As well as behaving in particular ways being onnarashii means conforming to particular styles of speech Some of the features of women s speech include speaking in a higher register using more polite forms and using polite speech or honorifics in more situations and referring to themselves and those whom they address more formally 5 6 Some linguistic features commonly associated with women include omission of the copula da the use of first person pronouns such as watashi or atashi among others use of feminine sentence final particles such as wa na no kashira and mashō and the more frequent use of the honorific prefixes o and go 5 Actual language used by Japanese speaking women differs from these ideals Such onnarashii speech is a social norm that institutions such as education and media encourage women to adopt Similarly these forms may be prescribed for women learners by Japanese textbooks and other materials There are however various deviations from these norms in conversation 5 Although Japanese women may not follow the gender norm in speech some linguistic studies indicate that Japanese women tend to use more honorific language than men do which reinforces the idea of onnarashii and conventional gender roles 7 Conventional men s speech editJust as there are modes of speaking and behaviour that have sometimes been considered intrinsically feminine there are also those that are considered otokorashii 男らしい manly or masculine Based on men s reports of their own speech as well as prescriptive advice for language use men s language is thought of as using fewer polite forms distinct pronouns and sentence final particles and some reduced vowels 8 Some words associated with men s speech include the informal da in place of the copula desu first person pronouns such as ore and boku and sentence final particles such as yo ze zo and kana 5 Masculine speech also features less frequent use of honorific prefixes and fewer aizuchi response tokens 9 Research on Japanese men s speech shows greater use of neutral forms forms not strongly associated with masculine or feminine speech than is seen in Japanese women s speech 9 Some studies of conversation between Japanese men and women show neither gender taking a more dominant position in interaction Men however tend to show a self oriented conversation style telling stories and expressing their expertise on topics being discussed more than is typical of women in these studies 10 In modern society editSince the late twentieth century observers have noted that individual Japanese men and women do not necessarily speak in the ways attributed to their gender Scholars have described considerable variation within each gender some individuals use these characteristics of gendered speech while others do not 5 Upper class women who did not conform to conventional expectations of gendered speech were sometimes criticized for failing to maintain so called traditional Japanese culture 5 In the LGBT community edit Okama entertainers and one kotoba edit Another recent phenomenon influencing gender norms in speech is the popularity of okama おかま entertainers typically men who enact very feminine speech dress and other gender markers The word okama originally referred to feminine male homosexuals but its usage has expanded to refer to masculine gay men male cross dressers and trans women among other uses 11 12 Entertainers who identify as okama sometimes use a form of speech called one kotoba オネエ言葉 literally older sister speech but with the word one older sister used to denote an effeminate man a speaking style that combines the formal aspects of women s speech described above with blunt or crude words and topics 13 For example あたし 今 カレー 食ったら 下痢 だ わ Atashi ima kare kuttara geri da wa If I ate curry now I d get diarrhea The pronoun atashi and the sentence final da wa is typical of women s speech while the verb kuttara is typical of men s speech and the topic itself is very blunt 13 Hideko Abe suggests that one kotoba originated during the Shōwa era among sex workers known as danshō 男娼 literally male prostitutes who adopted feminine speech wore women s clothing and often referred to themselves as women 14 Celebrities and tarento who use one kotoba include Akihiro Miwa Shōgo Kariyazaki IKKO Kaba chan and the twin brothers Osugi and Peeco 14 In one instance two lesbian users of one kotoba were interviewed by Claire Maree who reported that they were characterized as onna one 女オネエ or female queens by their peers Maree argues that they were attempting to avoid both heteronormative femininity and stereotypes of lesbians as masculine 15 Onabe and transgender male speakers edit The word onabe おなべ although it originally referred to masculine lesbians and female cross dressers has evolved to include trans men 11 12 16 Onabe hosts interviewed in the 1995 documentary Shinjuku Boys use a variety of gendered markers in their speech that are traditionally considered feminine or masculine One speaker exclusively uses the reflexive pronoun jibun 自分 as a gender neutral first person pronoun but also utilizes ending particles like na no while another uses the first person pronoun ore but does not consider themself a man or a woman 17 Abe further notes that two onabe included in a round table discussion in the bisexual and lesbian magazine Anise used jibun as a first person pronoun while trans men preferred boku 14 See also editJapanese pronouns Gender neutral pronoun Japanese Language and gender Nyōbō kotobaReferences edit Okamoto Shigeko Shibamoto Smith Janet S 2004 Introduction Japanese Language Gender and Ideology Cultural Models and Real People Oxford University Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 19 516617 0 Okamoto Shigeko 2013 Variability in societal norms for Japanese women s speech Implications for linguistic politeness Multilingua 32 2 203 223 doi 10 1515 multi 2013 0010 Jorden Eleanor Harz Noda Mari 1987 Japanese The Spoken Language New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 03834 7 David Oana 2009 Teineigo and style mixing Formality variation in the interview register and application of conversation analysis theory PDF Master of Sciences University of Oxford Retrieved 30 August 2016 a b c d e f Siegal Meryl Okamoto Shigeko 2003 Toward reconceptualizing the teaching and learning of gendered speech styles in Japanese as a Foreign Language Japanese Language and Literature 37 1 49 66 doi 10 2307 3594875 JSTOR 3594875 Kazuko Ashizawa 1998 Mangajin s Basic Japanese Through Comics Weatherhill ISBN 0 8348 0452 2 Tanaka Lidia 2004 Gender Language and Culture A Study of Japanese Television Interview Discourse John Benjamins Publishing ISBN 978 90 272 3079 9 Sturtz Sreetharan Cindi 2004 Japanese men s linguistic stereotypes and realities In Shigeko Okamoto and Janet Shibamoto Smith ed Japanese Language Gender and Ideology Oxford ISBN 0 19 516617 5 a b Sturtz Sreetharan Cindi 2004 Students sarariiman pl and seniors Japanese men s use of manly speech register Language in Society 33 1 doi 10 1017 S0047404504031045 ISSN 0047 4045 S2CID 145516163 Itakura Hiroko Tsui Amy B M 2004 Gender and conversational dominance in Japanese conversation Language in Society 33 2 doi 10 1017 S0047404504332033 hdl 10397 7638 ISSN 0047 4045 S2CID 55161059 a b Wim Lunsing 2005 The politics of okama and onabe In Mark McLelland and Romit Dasgupta ed Genders Transgenders and Sexualities in Japan Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 26058 4 a b McLelland Mark January 2000 Male Homosexuality and Popular Culture in Modern Japan Intersections Gender History and Culture in the Asian Context 3 a b Wim Lunsing Claire Maree 2004 Shifting speakers Negotiating reference in relation to sexuality and gender In Shigeko Okamoto and Janet Shibamoto Smith ed Japanese Language Gender and Ideology Oxford ISBN 0 19 516617 5 a b c Abe Hideko 2010 03 15 Queer Japanese Gender and Sexual Identities through Linguistic Practices Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 10616 1 Maree C 2008 09 24 Martin Fran Jackson Peter McLelland Mark Yue Audrey eds Grrrl Queens Onee kotoba and the Negotiation of Heterosexist Gender Norms and Lesbo homo phobic Stereotypes in Japanese AsiaPacifiQueer Rethinking Genders and Sexualities University of Illinois Press pp 67 84 hdl 11343 29045 ISBN 978 0 252 03307 0 Abe Hideko 2015 04 20 Onabe in Bolin Anne Whelehan Patricia eds The International Encyclopedia of Human Sexuality Oxford UK John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 831 860 doi 10 1002 9781118896877 wbiehs316 ISBN 978 1 118 89687 7 retrieved 2022 12 26 Maree Claire August 2003 Ore wa ore dakara Because I m me A study of gender and language in the documentary Shinjuku Boys Intersections Gender History and Culture in the Asian Context 9 Further reading editCherry Kittredge Kurihara Yoko Nakanishi Kiyomi 1995 日本語は女をどう表現してきたか Womansword What Japanese Words Say About Women in Japanese Benesse ISBN 4 8288 5728 1 Graddol David Joan Swann 1990 Gender Voices Blackwell Publishers ISBN 0 631 13734 3 Sapir Edward 1958 Culture language and personality Selected essays University of California Press Schonfeld Alexander 1999 Manifestations of Gender Distinction in the Japanese Language Archived from the original on 2010 09 22 Retrieved 2005 09 09 Smith Phillip M 1979 Sex Markers in Speech Social Markers in Speech London Cambridge University Press Tannen Deborah 1990 You Just Don t Understand Women and Men in Conversation William Morrow amp Co ISBN 0 688 07822 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gender differences in Japanese amp oldid 1173706699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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