TY - BOOK AU - Dumas,Raechel TI - The Monstrous-Feminine in Contemporary Japanese Popular Culture T2 - East Asian Popular Culture SN - 9783319924649 AV - HQ1762 D86 2018 U1 - 306.095 23 PY - 2018/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan KW - Culture KW - Ethnology-Asia KW - Gender KW - Motion pictures-Asia KW - Popular Culture KW - Asian Culture KW - Asian Cinema and TV KW - Culture and Gender KW - Global/International Culture N1 - P.B; 1. Open Wounds: Situating the Monstrous-Feminine in Contemporary Japan -- 2. The Girls that Never End: The Infinite Seduction of Tomie and Ring -- 3. Xenogenesis: Monstrous Mothers and Evolutionary Horrors in Contemporary Japanese Science Fiction -- 4. Faces of Horror, Dances of Death: Female Revenants and Suburban Hauntings in New Millennial Japanese Horror Films -- 5. Corrupted Innocence, Sacred Violence, and Gynoid Becomings: The Monstrous-Feminine on the Gaming Scene -- 6. Disobedient Bodies, Monstrous Affinities: Reframing Female Defilement in Natsuo Kirino's The Goddess Chronicle -- 7. The End? N2 - This book explores the monstrous-feminine in Japanese popular culture, produced from the late years of the 1980s through to the new millennium. Raechel Dumas examines the role of female monsters in selected works of fiction, manga, film, and video games, offering a trans-genre, trans-media analysis of this enduring trope. The book focuses on several iterations of the monstrous-feminine in contemporary Japan: the self-replicating shōjo in horror, monstrous mothers in science fiction, female ghosts and suburban hauntings in cinema, female monsters and public violence in survival horror games, and the rebellious female body in mytho-fiction. Situating the titles examined here amid discourses of crisis that have materialized in contemporary Japan, Dumas illuminates the ambivalent pleasure of the monstrous-feminine as a trope that both articulates anxieties centered on shifting configurations of subjectivity and nationhood, and elaborates novel possibilities for identity negotiation and social formation in a period marked by dramatic change ER -