Title: AJJ: Anthropology of Japan in Japan
1AJJAnthropologyof Japanin Japan
FALL WORKSHOP
2Session 2, Part 2
3Recapping the first segment
- As indicated in the introduction,
- semiology depends on signs
- to make meaning.
4Recapping the first segment
- As demonstrated by the presenters,
- these signs may take the form of media,
- themselves.
5In this Segment
- However, most often, signs are found in the
actual content of media in the messages.
6A Focus on Media Content
- In searching for patterns or logics to Japanese
culture, this segment focuses on media content
what we call message
7About the Presenters
8Debra J. Occhi
The Nature of Sentiment in Japanese Enka Music
9Debra J. Occhi
- Is an Associate Professor at Miyazaki
International College. - She received her Ph.D. in 2000 from the
University of California, Davis. - Her dissertation fieldwork in Sendai, Miyagi
prefecture, explored enka music and associated
discourses. - Her research interests include anthropological
and cognitive linguistics. - Current foci are contemporary Japanese language
and culture, emotion, gender, and regionality. - She plans to investigate regional foodstuffs and
dialect in the future.
10Tsuneo AyabeandHiroko Ayabe
- Globalization and Changing Japanese Images Seen
from the Outside a historical analysis
11Tsuneo Ayabe
- Is Professor Emeritus of the University of
Tsukuba. - He is currently a professor at Josai
International University - His many books include the edited volume,
Japanese seen from the outside (in Japanese)
and Multiculturalism, Nation State and Ethnic
Minorities in the Process of Globalization. - His areas of specialization are Cultural
Anthropology, Southeast Asia and North American
studies.
12Hiroko Ayabe
- Is formerly a professor at Tsukuba University.
- She is currently a professor at Josai
International University - She has an MA in linguistics from Kyushu
University. - Her past publications include How to get a
small piece of work done in Japanese Kissinger
and Japanese-American communication Sapir in
the relativity theory Areas of interest
Differences in English and Japanese communication
style and speech acts and Japanese and Thai
proverbs.
13Anka Veronika Badurina Haemmerle
Venus Under Construction Creating Female
Characters for Japanese TV Advertising
14Anka Veronika Badurina Haemmerle
- Is a Ph.D. Candidate in Cultural Anthropology at
Kyoto University, Japan. - She is currently conducting fieldwork at a major
Japanese Advertising Agency in Osaka - Her research concerns gender and the construction
of gendered images in Japanese television
advertising.
15We begin withProfessor Occhi
16(No Transcript)
17(No Transcript)
18Some Commentsand Discussion
19Form and Content
- One of the earliest conceptual tacks advanced in
sociology was the distinction between form and
content. - This was a dualism that McLuhan featured
prominently in his early analysis of medium
(form) and message (content). - McLuhan, though, tended to perceive form in
mechanical rather than process terms - Instrumentality over actual communication
20Form over Content
- McLuhans form fetish tended, in his estimation,
to dwarf the import of content. - personified in the aphorism the medium is the
message
21Lingering Concerns
- But one McLuhan-like concern that we might apply
to the content of contemporary media is this - the formatic conventions that come into play
which shape, either - the presentation of information, or
- the interpretation of it by the message recipient
22For instance,
- Enka as a form
- with conventions dictating that codes be read a
particular way - leading to a particularized construction of
meaning.
23For instance,
- The creative group at an advertising agency
- Encodes particular significations of woman into
their ads - Thereby either
- Reproducing long-held images of woman,
- Or else (potentially) producing new, different or
rival views
24The Attention to Form
- Leads to a concern about production
- In turn, leading us to consider the circuits of
culture - (Hall, 1972)
25The Cultural Circuit
- Much has been made (rightly) of Halls model of
encoding/decoding - The model helped break the hegemony of the
effects school - that viewed message production as an
institution-directed, producer-led process
26Understanding Hall
- Instead, signs were not just encoded in messages
and sent out and received - They were also processed and worked with by a
reader who might - passively accept the meaning imposed by the
producer, - negotiate meaning with the producer,
- Or come up with their own aberrant decoding of
the message/sign
27Among our Presenters
- Not much is said about how readers decode signs
from this particular panel - However, other papers (Nakashimas, Farrers,
most notably) do tell us about the
reception/action process.
28Passive Versus Active Decoding
- The flaw in much of cultural studies infatuation
with the empowered audience is it fails to
recognize the great laxity of many readers. - I recommend that a distinction be made between
passive and active decoding.
292 Kinds of Sign Processing
Active Decoder
Passive Decoder
Viewer
Reader
Compared These are dissimilar orientations
carrying differing consequences
30And in my own view
- There tends to be a larger amount of passive than
active decoding in everyday life - When all media sources and the hundreds of
thousands of daily messages humans must process
are all tallied
31At the same time, in Japan
- There seems to be a lot of active decoding going
on when one looks at sign-messages in particular
media - Such as advertising
- Or television
32Semiotic Literacy
- One key to understanding the complex codes
circulating in a culture
Therefore, one way to uncover the unique ontology
of any particular society
33What isSemiotic Literacy?
- the ability of message recipients to recognize
and decode signs
Defined
intellectual/internal
2 Mediating Factors
situational/external
34Why Semiotic Literacy Matters
- A message receivers semiotic orientation (be it
high or low) will, in turn, determine - whether the sign or its elements will be
processed at all - Whether decoding of the intended associations
will be the result of active reading - How intended meaning will be acted on, if at all
- The quality of information produced and
transmitted (in the society/milieu)
35resignification where semiotic literacy
matters
- Resignification is significant because it takes
- new signifieds
- And attaches them to
- prior or old signifiers
- It places heavy demands on the message receiver
36resignification tells us much about the
culture it originates from
- Resignification
- places heavy demands on the message receiver
- Reveals the immense stock(s) of knowledge present
in a culture
37 Resignification--defined
- The process by which prior elements associated
with the sign (i.e. signifiers, signifieds, signs
and significations) are converted into other
elements in different significatory chains via
cultural reference.
38Resignification explained
- the displacement of a sign-element from one
significatory sequence into another - the original signification is decontextualized
and reworked into the fabric of the focal
(Japanese mediated popular culture) context - some, but not all such signs are indigenized
- the sign takes on a new or different character
from its previous reality - its new character is due in large part to its
exo-spatial, exo-temporal and/or exo-ideational
basis.
39Import
- This is one way that globalization is proceeding
- globalization being the core issue in the work
of the Ayabes - Also a matter of social re/production
- an issue that arises in the work of at least two
of our authors in this session - Occhi and Haemmerle
40Import
- It also leads us toward considerations of the
environment - for Japan is nothing if not a complex, integrated
environment
41Import
- one in which media and message intersect, play
off and buttress one another - giving voice to and shaping culture.
- The kind of synthetic, all-encompassing,
poly-ideational communication milieu that Kellner
(1995) calls Media Culture.
42Points to be taken upin the next section