Research Catalog

Beautiful fighting girl / Saitō Tamaki ; translated by J. Keith Vincent and Dawn Lawson ; commentary by Hiroki Azuma.

Title
Beautiful fighting girl / Saitō Tamaki ; translated by J. Keith Vincent and Dawn Lawson ; commentary by Hiroki Azuma.
Author
Saitō, Tamaki, 1961-
Publication
Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, c2011.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance PN6790.J3 S2513 2011Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
  • Vincent, Keith, 1968-
  • Lawson, Dawn
  • Azuma, Hiroki, 1971-
Description
xxv, 213 p. : ill.; 22 cm.
Summary
From Cutie Honey and Sailor Moon to Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, the worlds of Japanese anime and manga teem with prepubescent girls toting deadly weapons. Sometimes overtly sexual, always intensely cute, the beautiful fighting girl has been both hailed as a feminist icon and condemned as a symptom of the objectification of young women in Japanese society.In Beautiful Fighting Girl, Saito Tamaki offers a far more sophisticated and convincing interpretation of this alluring and capable figure. For Saito, the beautiful fighting girl is a complex sexual fantasy that paradoxically lends reality to the fictional spaces she inhabits. As an object of desire for male otaku (obsessive fans of anime and manga), she saturates these worlds with meaning even as her fictional status demands her ceaseless proliferation and reproduction. Rejecting simplistic moralizing, Saito understands the otaku’s ability to eroticize and even fall in love with the beautiful fighting girl not as a sign of immaturity or maladaptation but as a result of a heightened sensitivity to the multiple layers of mediation and fictional context that constitute life in our hypermediated world—a logical outcome of the media they consume.Featuring extensive interviews with Japanese and American otaku, a comprehensive genealogy of the beautiful fighting girl, and an analysis of the American outsider artist Henry Darger, whose baroque imagination Saito sees as an important antecedent of otaku culture, Beautiful Fighting Girl was hugely influential when first published in Japan, and it remains a key text in the study of manga, anime, and otaku culture. Now available in English for the first time, this book will spark new debates about the role played by desire in the production and consumption of popular culture.
Uniform Title
Sentō bishōjo no seishin bunseki. English
Alternative Title
Sentō bishōjo no seishin bunseki.
Subject
  • Comic books, strips, etc. > Japan > History and criticism
  • Women in popular culture > Japan
  • Girls in popular culture > Japan
  • Girls in literature
  • Girls in art
  • Popular culture > Japanese influences
  • Animated films > Japan > History and criticism
Genre/Form
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Language (note)
  • Translated from the Japanese.
Contents
A note on the translation -- Translator's introduction: Making it real : fiction, desire, and the queerness of the beautiful fighting girl / J. Keith Vincent -- Preface -- The psychopathology of the Otaku -- Letter from an Otaku -- Beautiful fighting girls outside Japan -- The strange kingdom of Henry Darger -- A genealogy of the beautiful fighting girl -- The emergence of the phallic girls -- Afterword to the first edition (2000) -- Afterword to the paperback edition (2006) -- Commentary. The elder sister of Otaku: Japan's database animals / Hiroki Azuma.
ISBN
  • 9780816654505 (alk. paper)
  • 0816654506 (alk. paper)
  • 9780816654512 (pbk. : alk. paper)
  • 0816654514 (pbk. : alk. paper)
LCCN
^^2010047576
OCLC
  • 683247717
  • SCSB-13717093
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library