Experiences of Coming Out in Japan: Negotiating “Perceived Homophobia”
Heteronormative society requires non-heterosexuals to come out in order to be recognized. Coming out is often the most challenging experience for non-heterosexuals and heteronormativity and homophobia are two powerful obstacles that they have to deal with. This paper considers how non-heterosexuals...
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oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:apssr-10572024-05-29T01:54:02Z Experiences of Coming Out in Japan: Negotiating “Perceived Homophobia” Motoyama, Kotona Heteronormative society requires non-heterosexuals to come out in order to be recognized. Coming out is often the most challenging experience for non-heterosexuals and heteronormativity and homophobia are two powerful obstacles that they have to deal with. This paper considers how non-heterosexuals come out to themselves and to heterosexual others under the effect of Japanese cultural norms. Interviews with 24 non-heterosexuals and their experiences revealed that they have to deal with not only heteronormativity and homophobia like non-heterosexuals in the Western culture, but also “perceived homophobia,” which is created by the expectation of “respectable Japanese selves.” Thus, coming out in Japan requires a continuous process of negotiation with cultural norms embedded in a society. The paper raises questions about the necessity of considering cultural differences in coming out and explains how non-heterosexuals negotiate with themselves and others in order to live “happily” in Japan’s strongly conformist culture. This paper provides a better understanding of sexual minority issues in the Japanese context. 2015-12-30T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/apssr/vol15/iss2/6 info:doi/10.59588/2350-8329.1057 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/apssr/article/1057/viewcontent/5_20motoyama_20121015.pdf Asia-Pacific Social Science Review Animo Repository Non-heterosexuals coming out Japanese cultural norms heteronormativity homophobia perceived homophobia |
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Non-heterosexuals coming out Japanese cultural norms heteronormativity homophobia perceived homophobia Motoyama, Kotona Experiences of Coming Out in Japan: Negotiating “Perceived Homophobia” |
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Heteronormative society requires non-heterosexuals to come out in order to be recognized. Coming out is often the most challenging experience for non-heterosexuals and heteronormativity and homophobia are two powerful obstacles that they have to deal with. This paper considers how non-heterosexuals come out to themselves and to heterosexual others under the effect of Japanese cultural norms. Interviews with 24 non-heterosexuals and their experiences revealed that they have to deal with not only heteronormativity and homophobia like non-heterosexuals in the Western culture, but also “perceived homophobia,” which is created by the expectation of “respectable Japanese selves.” Thus, coming out in Japan requires a continuous process of negotiation with cultural norms embedded in a society. The paper raises questions about the necessity of considering cultural differences in coming out and explains how non-heterosexuals negotiate with themselves and others in order to live “happily” in Japan’s strongly conformist culture. This paper provides a better understanding of sexual minority issues in the Japanese context. |
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text |
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Motoyama, Kotona |
author_facet |
Motoyama, Kotona |
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Motoyama, Kotona |
title |
Experiences of Coming Out in Japan:
Negotiating “Perceived Homophobia” |
title_short |
Experiences of Coming Out in Japan:
Negotiating “Perceived Homophobia” |
title_full |
Experiences of Coming Out in Japan:
Negotiating “Perceived Homophobia” |
title_fullStr |
Experiences of Coming Out in Japan:
Negotiating “Perceived Homophobia” |
title_full_unstemmed |
Experiences of Coming Out in Japan:
Negotiating “Perceived Homophobia” |
title_sort |
experiences of coming out in japan:
negotiating “perceived homophobia” |
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Animo Repository |
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2015 |
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https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/apssr/vol15/iss2/6 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/apssr/article/1057/viewcontent/5_20motoyama_20121015.pdf |
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