Japan, shōjo shōsetsu, or girls' novels, have been a fixture in the field of popular literature for at least the past century. In recent decades, the principal publisher of this narrative form has been Shūeisha's Cobalt Library (Kobaruto bunko). However, with material no longer published in print form and with Shūeisha establishing a new Orange Library (Orenji bunko) series of "light novels" (raito noberu, easy to read stories for young adult readers), to which many previous Cobalt writers have migrated, it appears that the shōjo shōsetsu genre may well disappear. This article positions the historic and more recent production of girls' novels within the socio-historic parameters of Japanese society to investigate the apparent demise of works of this nature. In doing so, connections are made between the shōjo shōsetsu and the gender norms that have marginalized Japanese women in the past and that arguably continue to do so today.
History
Publication title
US - Japan Women's Journal: English Supplement
Volume
62
Pagination
133-149
ISSN
2330-5037
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
United States
Place of publication
University of Hawai'i Press
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Literature; Understanding Asia’s past; Other culture and society not elsewhere classified