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Hori, Hikari. "Views from Elsewhere: Female shoguns in yoshinaga fumi’s ōoku and their precursors in japanese popular culture." Japanese Studies 32. (2012): 77–95. 
Added by: joachim (19/07/2012, 14:11)   
Resource type: Journal Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
BibTeX citation key: Hori2012
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Ōoku", Gender, History comics, Japan, Manga, Science Fiction, Yoshinaga. Fumi
Creators: Hori
Collection: Japanese Studies
Views: 7/472
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Abstract
This paper examines the recent hit shōjo manga by Yoshinaga Fumi, Ōoku: The Inner Chambers, which creates a science fiction alternate version of Edo-period Japan ruled by a female shogun. This gender-reversed world is the outcome of the sudden outbreak of an epidemic that kills only male youths in the era of the third shogun Iemitsu. In the inner chambers of Edo Castle, which are the private space of the shogun, 3,000 beautiful men live and work. This alternative world rereads existing historical narratives and also provides a critical space for readers to examine the multiple discourses of gender and sexuality. The paper approaches this re-representation of Japanese premodern history in the genre of shōjo manga from several angles. To provide a fuller understanding of Ōoku, it shows how revisionist presentation of the Tokugawa inner chambers in a 1960s Yoshiya Nobuko novel provided a model for a subgenre of historical period drama in post-war popular culture. It also examines shōjo manga traditions of non-normative gender identities.
Added by: joachim  
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