FINDING METACULTURE IN NARRATIVE: THE CASE OF DIASPORIC JAPANESE IN THE UNITED STATES

Authors

  • Masataka Yamaguchi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11157/sites-vol4iss1id23

Abstract

I am concerned with finding a widely circulating ideology in life story narratives told to me by three diasporic Japanese in the United States. By drawing on discourse analytic perspectives, I analyse audio-recorded interview data as ‘cultural objects’ and extract participants’ ‘ideology’ from the ‘objects’. In so doing, I attempt to find widely circulating and relatively enduring values in the discourses of these narratives. By analytically focusing on contextually contingent aspects of language use, I make explicit the pattern of the ‘success story line’. These findings are then compared with another study on autobiographical narrative. While qualifying the generalisability of the findings, I argue that my own study proposes a hypothesis that deserves further investigation in providing a concrete piece of evidence against the idea of ‘postmodern fragmented subjects’ (Jameson 1984).

Author Biography

Masataka Yamaguchi

Lecturer, Department of Languages and Cultures

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Published

12-06-2008

How to Cite

Yamaguchi, M. (2008). FINDING METACULTURE IN NARRATIVE: THE CASE OF DIASPORIC JAPANESE IN THE UNITED STATES. Sites: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies, 4(1), 122–143. https://doi.org/10.11157/sites-vol4iss1id23

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Articles