- 著者
-
Tsugumi Okabe
Jérémie Pelletier-Gagnon
- 出版者
- Japanese Association for Digital Humanities
- 雑誌
- Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (ISSN:21887276)
- 巻号頁・発行日
- vol.4, no.1, pp.37-53, 2019-08-30 (Released:2019-08-29)
- 参考文献数
- 31
The genre of boys’ love (BL), which generally refers to a body of works that
depict fictional relationships between beautiful “boys,” is produced for and
consumed mainly by women in Japan. Ludic expressions of sexuality and gender
unique to BL have gained popularity on a global scale but have also drawn
negative attention. In this article, we employ the concept of asobigokoro
(playful spirit/heart) to highlight the importance of regional ideas of play and
playfulness in game analysis. We argue that asobigokoro functions as a kind of
counter-discourse as it privileges non-Eurocentric ways of knowing,
understanding, and “playing” with representations of sexuality. Game analysis
through an asobigokoro lens enriches the field of regional gaming by drawing on
Japanese sociopolitical contexts to situate a reading of Japanese ludic
representations. Asobigokoro stresses the importance of understanding cultural
variations of “play” and “playfulness” in order to make sense of “taboo”
subjects in culturally nuanced ways. In our textual analysis of Enzai: Falsely
Accused, we discover that the simultaneous appropriation and subversion of
violent and sexually explicit content, which characterizes the game’s
asobigokoro, can be traced to Japanese feminist forms of asobi (play), which are
rooted within the Yaoi tradition.