- 著者
-
和泉 悠
- 出版者
- 日本哲学会
- 雑誌
- 哲学 (ISSN:03873358)
- 巻号頁・発行日
- vol.2018, no.69, pp.32-43, 2018-04-01 (Released:2018-08-01)
- 参考文献数
- 16
This paper examines the semantics of Japanese generic sentences that involve
reference to gender stereotypes and considers how they possibly contribute to the
presence and perpetuation of sexual harassment. The main strategy of the paper is,
first, to uncover the possible ways in which sentences that contain the explicit deontic
modal expression in Japanese beki (roughly corresponding to ought) contribute
to the cases of hostile environment sexual harassment, and second, to compare the
explicitly modal sentences and generic sentences that contain no explicit modal in
order to show that the latter also express modal, normatively laden contents. As a
standard theory of deontic modality, I apply Angelika Kratzer’s analysis of ought to
Japanese sentences containing beki. For the sake of concrete illustration, I also introduce
Asher and Morreau’s (1995) analysis of generics and extend it to Japanese examples.
The comparison shows that, insofar as the uses of explicitly normative sentences
such as “All women ought to wear a skirt” contribute to hostile environment
harassment, implicitly normative sentences such as “Women wear a skirt” make a
similar, if not equal, contribution to the legitimization of gender-specific norms. The
paper concludes with the suggestion that we pay more attention to generic sentences
with gender-specific terms, and that we use explicit quantifiers and singular
terms more often than not to avoid ambiguity and possible inadvertent consequences.