The cool-kawaii : Afro-Japanese aesthetics and new world modernity

cover image

Where to find it

Davis Library (4th floor)

Call Number
BH301.M54 B68 2011
Status
Available

Stone Center Library

Call Number
BH301.M54 B68 2011
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

At the turn of the millennium, international youth culture is dominated by mainly two types of aesthetics: the African American cool, which, propelled by Hip-Hop music, has become the world's favorite youth culture; and the Japanese aesthetics of kawaii or cute, that is distributed internationally by Japan's powerful anime industry.



The USA and Japan are cultural superpowers and global trendsetters because they make use of two particular concepts that hide complex structures under their simple surfaces and are difficult to define, but continue to fascinate the world: cool and kawaii. The Cool-Kawaii: Afro-Japanese Aesthetics and New World Modernity , by Thorsten Botz-Bornstein, analyzes these attitudes and explains the intrinsic powers that are leading to a fusion of both aesthetics.



Cool and kawaii are expressions set against the oppressive homogenizations that occur within official modern cultures, but they are also catalysts of modernity. Cool and kawaii do not refer us back to a pre-modern ethnic past. Just like the cool African American man has almost no relationship with traditional African ideas about masculinity, the kawaii shôjo is not the personification of the traditional Japanese ideal of the feminine, but signifies an ideological institution of women based on Japanese modernity in the Meiji period, that is, a feminine image based on westernization.



At the same time, cool and kawaii do not transport us into a futuristic, impersonal world of hypermodernity based on assumptions of constant modernization. Cool and kawaii stand for another type of modernity, which is not technocratic, but rather "Dandyist" and closely related to the search for human dignity and liberation.

Contents

  • Acknowledgments p. ix
  • Introduction p. xi
  • 1 Cool and Kawaii p. 1
  • 2 New World Modernity p. 21
  • 3 Aspects of Cuteness p. 41
  • 4 Cross Gender Tendencies in Cool and Kawaii p. 63
  • 5 Coolness between Virtue Ethics and Aesthetics p. 77
  • 6 The Temptation of Kitsch p. 93
  • 7 Kitsch in Japan: Tradition and Modernity p. 105
  • 8 Cool and Dandyism: Two Words-One Concept p. 121
  • 9 Dandyism, Consumer Society, and Virtual Reality p. 151
  • Conclusion: A Dialectics of Cool and Kawaii? p. 171
  • Bibliography p. 187
  • Index p. 205
  • About the Author p. 209

Other details