ISSUE 9
AUTUMN 2020
ARTISTS, AESTHETICS, AND ARTWORKS
FROM, AND IN CONVERSATION WITH, JAPAN
PART 2
MUTUAL IMAGES
ISSUE 9 – AUTUMN 2020
MUTUAL IMAGES
A TRANSCULTURAL RESEARCH JOURNAL
FOUNDED BY
AURORE YAMAGATA-MONTOYA, MAXIME DANESIN & MARCO PELLITTERI
Previously published issues
ISSUE 1 – Between Texts and Images: Mutual Images of Japan and Europe
ISSUE 2 – Japanese Pop Cultures in Europe Today: Economic Challenges, Mediated Notions,
Future Opportunities
ISSUE 3 – Visuality and Fictionality of Japan and Europe in a Cross-Cultural Framework
ISSUE 4 – Japan and Asia: Representations of Selfness and Otherness
ISSUE 5 – Politics, arts and pop culture of Japan in local and global contexts
ISSUE 6 – Mediatised Images of Japan in Europe: Through the Media Kaleidoscope
ISSUE 7 – Layers of aesthetics and ethics in Japanese pop culture
ISSUE 8 – Artists, aesthetics, and artworks from, and in conversation with, Japan part 1 (of 2)
ARTISTS, AESTHETICS, AND ARTWORKS
FROM, AND IN CONVERSATION WITH, JAPAN
PART 2
EDITED BY
MARCO PELLITTERI & JOSÉ ANDRÉS SANTIAGO IGLESIAS
MUTUAL IMAGES – ISSUE 9 – AUTUMN 2020
MUTUAL IMAGES RESEARCH ASSOCIATION
MUTUAL IMAGES
A TRANSCULTURAL RESEARCH JOURNAL
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Mutual Images’ field of interest is the analysis and discussion of the everchanging, multifaceted relations between Europe and Asia, and between
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MUTUAL IMAGES
A TRANSCULTURAL RESEARCH JOURNAL
MAIN EDITOR
Marco PELLITTERI, Department of Media and Communication, School of Humanities and
Social Sciences, Xi’ian Jiaotong—Liverpool University (China)
JOURNAL MANAGERS
Maxime DANESIN, Independent Researcher (France)
Aurore YAMAGATA-MONTOYA, Independent Researcher (Spain)
EDITORIAL BOARD
Alejandra ARMENDÁRIZ-HERNÁNDEZ, Department of Sciences of Communication,
University Rey Juan Carlos (Spain); Matteo FABBRETTI, Graduate School of Core Ethics and
Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University (Japan); Christopher J. HAYES, Sainsbury
Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures (UK); Manuel HERNÁNDEZ-PÉREZ,
Faculty of Arts, Culture and Education, University of Hull (UK); Fabio Domenico PALUMBO,
Department of Ancient and Modern Civilizations, University of Messina (Italy); Marie
PRUVOST-DELASPRE, Department of Cinema and Audiovisual, New Sorbonne University
(France); Deborah Michelle SHAMOON, Department of Japanese Studies, National
University of Singapore (Singapore); Rik SPANJERS, Amsterdam School for Cultural
Analysis and Modern Dutch Language Department, Utrecht University (The Netherlands);
Bounthavy SUVILAY, Department of Modern Literature, University of Montpellier III
(France); Guido TAVASSI, Independent Researcher (Italy); Jamie TOKUNO, Independent
Researcher (USA)
SCIENTIFIC BOARD
Marco BELLANO, Department of Cultural Heritage, University of Padova (Italy); JeanMarie BOUISSOU, International Research Centre, European Training Programme Japan,
Sciences Po CERI (France); Christian GALAN, Centre of Japanese Studies (CEJ), INALCO,
Paris (France); Marcello GHILARDI, Department of Philosophy, University of Padova
(Italy); Paolo LA MARCA, Department of Humanities, University of Catania (Italy);
Pascal LEFÈVRE, LUCA School of Arts, Campus Sint-Lukas Brussels (Belgium); Boris
LOPATINSKY, Centre de recherche en études philologiques, littéraires et textuelles,
Université Libre de Bruxelles (Belgium); Ewa MACHOTKA, Department of Asian, Middle
Eastern and Turkish Studies, Stockholm University (Sweden); Paul M. MALONE,
Waterloo Centre for German Studies, University of Waterloo (Canada); Toshio MIYAKE,
Department of Asian and North African Studies, Ca' Foscari University of Venice (Italy);
NAGATO Yohei, Kyōto Seika University (Japan) and Kyōto University of Art and Design
(Japan); Nissim OTMAZGIN, Department of Asian Studies, The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem (Israel); ŌTSUKA Eiji, The International Research Center for Japanese Studies,
Kyōto (Japan); José Andrés SANTIAGO IGLESIAS, Department of Fine Arts, University of
Vigo (Spain); WONG Heung Wah, School of Modern Languages and Literature, The
University of Hong Kong (China)
MUTUAL IMAGES
ISSUE 9
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Editorial – Vale, annus horribilis. Salve, annus mirabilis?
MARCO PELLITTERI (Xi’ian Jiaotong—Liverpool University, China)
& JOSÉ ANDRÉS SANTIAGO IGLESIAS (Universidade de Vigo, Spain) ……….…….........…IX-XIV
ARTICLES
Influence and success of the Arabic edition of UFO Robo Grendizer: Adoption of a
Japanese icon in the Arabic-speaking world
KARIM EL MUFTI (Saint Joseph University of Beirut, Lebanon) .…………………………..3-37
Japanese Princesses in Chicago: Representations of Japanese Women in the San
Francisco Chronicle and Chicago Tribune (1872)
AURORE YAMAGATA-MONTOYA (Independent Researcher, Spain) ………………...……39-65
Lolita fashion, new media, and cultural hegemony in contemporary Japan
SHUAI ZIWEI (University College London, UK) ......................................................................67-88
REVIEWS
Bachelor Japanists: Japanese Aesthetics and Western Masculinities – Christopher Reed
TYRUS MILLER (University of California, Irvine, USA) ………………………………………91-94
The Japanese Cinema Book – Fujiki Hideaki & Alastair Phillips (eds)
ALEJANDRA ARMENDÁRIZ-HERNÁNDEZ (University Rey Juan Carlos, Spain)………...95-101
Lolita fashion, new media, and cultural hegemony in
contemporary Japan
SHUAI Ziwei | University College London, UK
HTTPS://DOI.ORG/10.32926/2020.9.SHU.LOLIT
ABSTRACT
This article seeks to present Lolita fashion, which emerged in Japan during the 1980s, as a case study in
performed, postmodern identities that are negotiated through consumerism. Opening with a broad stroke
introduction to Lolita fashion, with regard to its principal characteristics and its cultural origins, the article
attempts to examine the Lolita phenomenon using a variety of theoretical tools and approaches. Firstly, the
article considers Lolita fashion in the light of Antonio Gramsci's notion of cultural hegemony. I assert that
Lolita fashion might usefully be read as a place of rupture or resistance against the orthodox hegemony of
Japan's historically collectivist culture, one that provides its users with an alternate set of social values,
particularly when it comes to traditional notions of femininity. Next, I lean, particularly, on Stuart Hall's
ideas about modernity, and consider the question of agency, with regard to Lolita fashion, and attempt to
locate the impetus for it, not in multinational fashion houses, but the participants of Lolita subculture
themselves. In a third section, I go on to problematise that agency, drawing on John Storey's cultural theory
work. While it is a commonplace to attribute the rise of a totalising, contemporary mass culture to the
digital revolution, Storey locates a potential for new meanings to be generated, not so much within the act
of buying - for that is largely determined by the market - but in what he calls the 'production in use' of those
goods. The fashion adage, 'It's not what you wear, but how you wear it' seems to ring particularly true in
Lolita fashion, and I explore that idea further with an in-depth, textual analysis of a select image. I conclude
by considering Lolita fashion's exportation, out of Japan and into a globalised marketplace, and the
signification thereof.
KEYWORDS
Lolita; Fashion; Japan; Kawaii; Globalisation.
Date of submission: 12 December 2020
Date of acceptance: 18 December 2020
Date of publication: 20 December 2020
1. Introduction
‘Lolita’ style emerged, as a progressive form of street fashion in Harajuku, Japan, during
the 1980s, from a unique mixture of Japanese popular cultural movements and a love of
the qualities of ‘cuteness’. ‘Whether dressed in pink, powder blue, red, white or black’,
Lolita fashion adherents became recognisable through ‘their doll-like make-up, frilly
skirts, fanciful headgear, ribbons and lace’ (Victoria & Albert Museum, 2018, para. 1) (Fig.
1). In the context of the hyper-modern mediatised streetscape of Tokyo, Lolita figures cut
a surreal image, dressed in clothes that, stylistically speaking, originate in the nineteenth
LOLITA FASHION, NEW MEDIA, AND CULTURAL HEGEMONY IN CONTEMPORARY JAPAN
century, but which are, at the same time, being glamorously adorned with a knowing nod
towards a representation on social media networks that is wholly contemporary.
Fig. 1. Lolita fashion on the streets of Tokyo (ca. 2018). Source:
http://tokyofashion.com/horned-harajuku-girl-gothic-lolita-angelic-pretty/
As the image in Figure 1 makes clear, Lolita fashion is highly performative. Not only
are the clothes and make-up themselves extraordinarily elaborate, but the behaviour
of the wearers is also intensely inflected with artifice. Lolita fashion is also, as again the
image shows, a communal activity; the two girls, one dressed in black, one dressed in
white, form an ideally contrastive pair and their figural and gesticulating language is
clearly rehearsed, or at least highly constructed on the basis of a pre-existing
familiarity with each other’s roles and predilections. When viewed in terms of the
backdrop of contemporary Japanese society – one dominated in equal measure by
traditional hegemonic values and normative patterns of work and leisure – Lolita
fashion stands out (along with a host of other subcultural practices) as a place of
rupture or resistance where alternative value systems come into play.
With all this in mind, the aim of this article is to reconfigure Lolita fashion within the
context of both Japanese society and a globally widespread culture of new media
maintained in images and social networks on the basis of ideas about cultural hegemony
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(Gramsci, 1971, 12; Coban, 2018). The Lolita look is obviously indebted to Victorian
notions of style, the jouissance of perversion/subversion, and the provocative eroticism
of innocence in young girls expressed in the novel by Vladimir Nabokov that gave Lolita
fashion its name. However, Lolita is also a fundamentally contemporary phenomenon,
impossible to imagine outside of a global mediascape to which Lolita followers are
attuned. Lolita fashion must also be seen in terms of its crucial relationship with nonWestern, Japanese traditions of dress and social performance (the Geisha tradition, for
example), and these factors all combine to constitute a rich media context of overlapping
and convergent networks and practices that will, to the greatest extent possible, be
subject to critical analysis in what follows.
By drawing on a range of theorists of popular culture and media, the article will
consider the production, reproduction, and transformation of social values while
considering the streets (and public spaces more broadly) as ideological battlefields in
which dressing up, and performing the particularities of the dress, serve as a means to
reinvent the world rather than as a merely reflexive action produced by the dominance
of consumer culture, normative trends, hegemonic values, and the passive repetition
of corporate advertising imagery. At crucial junctures, Lolita fashion resists complicity
with hegemonic tendencies (Fraser and Rothman, 2018, 5).
Lolita fashion cannot be spoken about without reference to its implication in
participatory media cultures, as fashion dress becomes inseparable from its mode of
circulation through digital media-based social networks (Storey, 2018; Bartlett, Cole
and Rocamora, 2018). Dress, from this perspective, includes an ensemble of media
operations that ‘clothe’ the subject and project their identity, making it appropriate to
consider Lolita fashion in relation to broader discourses on consumerism and spectacle
within media studies (Lister, 2010; Debord, 2016; Baudrillard, 2014).
The structure of this article is designed to weave together the theoretical speculation
on the nature of digital fashion and performance cultures with direct object analysis of
media texts (in this case, the visual documentation of Lolita fashion). Rather than
carrying out these tasks separately and working through the theory before approaching
its implication in practice, this article will use theoretical texts as a way of reading Lolita
imagery, thereby simultaneously building up a critical theoretical backdrop and a series
of case studies that will help us to explore and expand on the phenomenon as a whole.
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The Lolita phenomenon is distinctive in that it is highly crafted out of both the
materiality of fashion and the immateriality of digital networks, and in respect of this
duality, it makes sense not to separate the practices of dressing and networking on
digital media. Following the same logic, it also makes sense to consider both dressing
and networking as articulations of cultural and social ideologies. These three motifs
conveniently map onto established methodological schemes for dealing with fashion
and visual culture. Gillian Rose’s identification of the three sites at which the image is
transformatively constructed and disseminated provides a useful framework for
negotiating the particular qualities of Lolita fashion. This framework circumscribes ‘the
site of production, that is, where an image is made; the site of the image itself, that is,
its visual content; and the site where the image encounters its spectators or users [its
audiencing]’ (Rose, 2012, 19).
These analytic nodes of production, content, and audience, together with a fourth
node of geographical locale that might usefully be added to Rose's model, will structure
the following analysis of Lolita fashion, enabling us to tackle the complex questions of
cultural hegemony that this article is fundamentally designed to engage with. In the
same way that exponents of Lolita fashion carefully choose their garments, design and
arrange their ensemble and go out and pose in the street or upload images on different
social media networks (each of which has its own distinctive appeal), this article will
also proceed through a series of critical outfits through which different aspects of the
Lolita phenomenon will be explored. These outfits will be chosen to reflect, as required,
elements of theory that emphasise different elements of the discourse. Together, the
entire ensemble aims to both offer a level of comprehension and a corresponding
measure of detailed analysis.
2. The Cultural Origins of Lolita Fashion
Lolita fashion and ‘Loli’ girls in Japanese fashion represent a nexus of complex
cultural origins. The name ‘Lolita’ was derived from the 1955 novel by Vladimir
Nabokov, which was made into a film in 1962 by Stanley Kubrick that featured James
Mason and Sue Lyon as Lolita (Fig. 2).
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Fig. 2. Still from Lolita (1962), dir. Kubrick. Source: Kubrick (2008).
The film opens with shots of James Mason’s character painting Lolita’s toe nails – a
powerful cinematic image that demonstrates the peculiar mixture of affection, care,
eroticism, and taboo that has, since the 1980s become synonymous, in Japan, with
Lolicom or Rorikon, which translates as 'Lolita Complex'. Increasingly a politically
sensitive subject in Japan, for self-evident reasons, 'Lolita Complex' describes an
attraction for teenage girls by adult and middle-aged men. In some respects, it has
become an umbrella term for a wide range of related predilections, encompassing
Arikon, an attraction for pre-teen girls, after Alice from Alice in Wonderland ('Ari-'
means 'Alice'); Heikon, an attraction for very little girls (after Heidi of Johanna Spyri’s
novel Heidi, who is 4-5 years old); and Shōtakon, the love complex for small boys (after
'Shōtarō', the boy protagonist from Tetsujin-28 go, a famous science-fiction manga of
the 1950s by Mitsuteru Yokoyama).
Both Nabokov’s Lolita novel and Japan's 'Lolita Complex', however, obfuscate as
much as they inform, and inscribe, meanings onto Lolita fashion. Lisa Blauersouth
observes that Nabokov's novel is less read, and therefore has less cultural resonance,
in Japan: 'In Japan, where the fashion originated, Lolita is less known, less of a problem',
she explains, 'In the West, the book's paedophilic associations haunt our community'
(Blauersouth, 2011, 314). At least one fashion commentator, meanwhile, views Lolita
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fashion 'as a reaction to sexualised representations of women in Japanese culture. It
displays', notes Rebecca Arnold, 'an almost confrontational femininity that prizes
elegance and modesty over seduction' (Arnold, 2018, 139).
Philologically indeterminate, Lolita fashion becomes an uncanny amalgam of everything
that is brought to it. The affective quality of Lolita, the young girl who inspires absolute
devotion in an older man, the young girl who is simultaneously sexually attractive and
innocent, is one aspect of the Lolita style within Japanese fashion. However, as the
screenshot above shows, the novel and the film are not the source of the actual sartorial
style of the subculture. As Winge (2008) pointed out, the fashion reference points for Lolita
style are, in fact, located in Victorian-era girls’ dress, emblematised by the figure of Alice in
Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, the 1865 fantasy novel that was partly inspired by
Carroll’s own Lolita-esque relationship with the schoolgirl, Alice Liddell (Winge, 2008). In
the illustrations to that text, the narrative is mediated by images of lace, ruffles, high
necklines, and voluminous skirts on the figure of Alice, who is herself an embodiment of
cuteness, albeit one with provocatively long hair, big eyes, and pouting lips. The duality
that exists at the root of the cultural origins of Lolita fashion highlights the lack of any
‘authentic’ genealogy or essence. It is a defining feature of Lolita fashion that it is eclectic,
diverse, and internally self-contradictory. It could be said that every iteration of Lolita
fashion goes some way towards redefining it as a media phenomenon.
Magazine culture has been instrumental in the circulation of Lolita fashion imagery,
both within Japan and internationally, through print circulation networks and digital
publishing. The Gothic and Lolita Bible is the most widely circulated document of this
type (Yoshinaga and Ishikawa, 2007). Winge (2008, 49) has noted, for example, that
the ‘visual style’ rock bands such as Buck-Tick that emerged in the 1980s took on the
trappings of the Lolita style, popularising the trend through music videos and fashion
shoots. In fact, moving from the street onto screen media had important implications
for the further dissemination and appropriation of Lolita style as it was introduced to
an increasingly global audience. Here, Gwen Stefani became perhaps the most wellknown artist to appropriate the Lolita style through her collaboration with the
Harajuku girls who appeared in numerous videos and stage appearances (Fig. 3).
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Fig. 3. Gwen Stefani and the Harajuku girls (2016). Source:
https://www.usmagazine.com/stylish/news/gwen-stefani-explains-her-harajuku-obsession-w441999/
An instance of cultural appropriation such as this raises significant questions that must
be addressed at this stage of the article. There is no doubt about the directness of the
appropriation – the name ‘Harajuku’ comes from the street district in Tokyo that is wellknown as the origin of Lolita fashion and its premier fashion and media hub (Kawamura,
2013, 66). There is also clearly a direct appropriation of multiple Lolita fashion traits: lace,
embroidery, and nineteenth-century ensembles being the most obvious examples. At the
same time, there is something entirely different about the presentation of the Harajuku
girls, that is, their flamboyant and overt adult sexual seductiveness expressed through
tight, figure-hugging clothes and exposed legs and cleavage, as well as the highly-rouged
lips and directly soliciting gazes. These are not traits that are native to the Lolita style as it
originated and continues to be performed inside of Japan.
In view of this, Lolita fashion can be seen to inhabit a contested space within the
overall socio-politics of media convergence culture (Jenkins 2004, 2006). ‘Convergence
culture’ has entered the language of media and communication studies as a means of
describing two principal phenomena. The first relates to the expansion within the array
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of media, media outlets, and forms of media circulation, combined with the inclusion
of users as active media producers, while the second relates to the challenge posed by
this new media tumult for ‘established forms of organisation across many domains,
from political to cultural production, from corporate decision-making to marketing’
(Couldry, 2011, 487-488).
3. Lolita Fashion and cultural Hegemony in Japan and Globally
Media convergence raises questions surrounding the extent to which media are able to,
or in fact do, challenge established forms of organisation across multiple domains. It is
clear that Lolita fashion does indeed participate in media convergence to the extent that it
inhabits not only bodies on the street but text, image and video sources of various kinds
and genres, all of which are rendered accessible through the internet. If these convergent
media are said to challenge established forms of organisation, what, in the context of
contemporary Japanese society, are these established forms of organisation? Can they be
considered hegemonic? And how does Lolita fashion challenge them?
Gagné (2008, 131) argued that one of the most distinctive features of Lolita fashion is
the ‘counter-public discourses’ of distinctive girls’ speech patterns used in online forums
as well as on the street. The creation of distinct linguistic sub-groupings has, in fact, a long
history in Japan, while it entered the realm of counter-public discourse after the Meiji
restoration when the state became a dominant source of modernisation through looking
towards Western economic and industrial practices as models for its own development,
thereby overturning centuries of cultural isolationism. Partly as a result of the state’s
dominant intervention into education, new counter-public communities (particularly
girls’ communities) emerged to contest, in often private but significant ways, the linguistic
hegemony of the state. ‘Hegemony’ is here used in its Gramscian sense, common in cultural
studies, as the manufacture of consent among the majority of the population as distinct
from the use of physical force by propagating the apparently natural superiority of certain
classes above others (Scott, 2014, s.v. ‘hegemony’). Here, Joseigo became a hegemonic form
of women’s speech that governed social expectations of what women would say and how
they would say it. Against this backdrop, multiple forms of counter-public speech have
emerged, including gyaru, which entertains exuberant forms of speech, and noripīgo,
which is defined as ‘childlike’ or ‘infantile’ (Gagné, 2008, 132).
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The emergence of counter-public speech communities associated with Lolita fashion
indicates that, to some extent, Lolita fashion represents an alternative narrative, or a way
of being that is distinct from the norm. Here, sociology has provided a set of key terms and
theories for understanding and conceptualising the idea of the normative, as well as the
deviation from the norm. Broadly speaking, as Goodman et al. (2012) have observed, there
are two basically opposed sociological explanations of how norms and divergence work.
First, norms are considered to be the product of social structures. These structures are
necessarily large and collective in scale and their concept ultimately derives from Marxist
thinking that considers society to be stratified into classes that are inherently antagonistic
towards one another (Goodman et al., 2012, 7). The advantage of a structural explanation
of normativity and deviation is that it operates at a very large scale, and therefore promises
to explain the tensions within society as a whole. Lying in direct opposition to the
structural model is the individual model proposed by Erving Goffman, wherein it is the
individual himself/herself whose interactions effectively shape our understanding of
everyday reality and social organisation (Goodman et al., 2012, 7).
Japan is frequently considered to be a collectivist society (Doak, 2014, 127). As such,
it would seem that structuralist models of understanding its culture would be the most
appropriate. However, Lolita fashion appears to directly subvert the expectation of
collectivism; indeed, it has certainly attracted criticism for its subversion of standard
expectations. Kawamura (2013) argued that what distinguishes Lolita fashion is that it
represents a departure from traditional forms of the collective subversion of the norms
of race, identity, class, sex, and politics.
Instead of taking a revolutionary, class-based stance, Lolita fashion can be considered a
postmodern subculture in which individual agency is modelled through a unique set of
consumer choices. Here, Kawamura (2013, 68) argued, with reference to Muggleton, that
postmodern subcultures ‘involve a combination of hybridity, diversity, and fluidity’ where
‘traditional points of collective identification, such as class, gender, race, and place, are
gradually replaced by elective, build-your-own consumer identities’. This sentiment has
led to an understanding of members of subcultures as postmodern subjects, exhibiting a
fragmented and individualistic personal style. The social and political implications of such
a subcultural position are that it exhibits freedom from structures and control and gives
the subject more space in which to express themselves.
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Looking at Lolita fashion catalogues certainly seems to correspond with Kawamura’s
ideas about ‘build-your-own consumer identities’ (Fig. 4).
Fig. 4. Classic Lolita style garments from the Body Line fashion catalogue (ca. 2000).
Source: Winge, 2008.
Indeed, the medium of the catalogue embodies the principle of difference within
similarity. Whilst it is the advertising device of fundamentally mass-producing
corporations, which demand that everything be as similar as possible in order to maximise
profits, it presents the illusion that anyone can be – and should be – anything they wish or
desire to be. The printed catalogue has now converged with the digital catalogue, meaning
that the process of do-it-yourself consumer fashion styling is instantly linked to other
media channels for sharing photographs and establishing networks of fellow avid fans.
However, it should also be noted that while the catalogue promises infinite variation of
self-fashioning, it also provides the possibility of closely-knit fashion communities held
together by shared themes and motifs that can nonetheless sustain individual permutation.
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This makes them particularly distinct from the class-based sartorial codes exemplified by
the uniform (Crane, 2009).
With this, it appears possible for Lolita to be both radical and hegemonic at the same
time. It is radical in so far as it permits liberal freedoms of choice and self-fashioning for
Lolita consumers through the availability of different dress items, yet it is hegemonic to
the extent that it serves to mirror the collective grouping that typifies collectivist societies.
While it may look extravagantly different from the ordinary office culture, Lolita fashion
nevertheless represents a definite social grouping of an alternative kind, a mirror image,
as it were, of the traditional class structures of Japanese society, albeit one that reflects
them as covered in lace, make-up, and frills. This would account for the perplexing mixture
of critique and acceptance that Lolita fashion encounters within Japanese society.
Nakamura et al. (2013, 174), for example, have described in detail how Lolita fashion has
‘been perceived as mirroring the wearer’s rejection of maturity and social conformity to
the normative mode of femininity’. At the same time, Kawamura’s (2013, 174) research
shows how Harajuku girls find Japan the most accepting of all their behaviours in ways
that would not be possible outside of Japan, especially in the West.
4. Lolita Fashion and the Question of Agency
One of the most pressing questions in current media studies is the question of
agency. Whether or not people are positioned or controlled by the media, or whether
in fact they have agency to resist, make their own meanings, and subvert dominant
meanings, are crucial concerns that specifically relate to fashion and consumerism.
There certainly exist widely diverging opinions regarding the agency that it is possible
to exercise in the context of consumerism, ranging from the idea that consumerism
permits minimal agency and, to a large extent, dictates consumer choice, to the idea
that consumer culture allows the maximum quantity of individual imagination
(Featherstone, 2014). In each case, the idea of agency is closely related to the idea of
participation. Here, we must ask, to what extent do Japanese Lolita fans participate in
the production of style and fashion, and to what extent are they merely passive
adherents who consume but do not produce?
Kawamura (2006, 784-785) made the radical claim that inverts the conventional
system of agency in the world of fashion media and business: ‘Japanese street fashion does
not come,’ he wrote, ‘from the famous Japanese designers, but is led by high school girls
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who have become extremely influential in controlling fashion trends’. This leads to the
extraordinary situation whereby Japanese fashion is effectively dictated by hyperconscious fashion youths in a spirit of experimentation and obsession. For Kawamura, not
only are fashion subcultures opportunities for liberation from established social destinies,
but they are also alternative systems of fashion business that actively participate in setting
trends, rather than follow existing ones meted out by corporations.
This point of view stems ultimately from a widely held understanding within media and
cultural studies that fashion can serve as a means of agency and empowerment for those
who are otherwise shut out of the corridors of power due to their being in some way
deviant or perverse in their predilections, or simply in their refusal to conform. This has
led to what Hall (2011, 596) has identified as a ‘crisis of identity’ in that the modern subject
inhabits a fractured and fragmented self that experiences the dislocation of the central
structures and processes of modern society. Media have played a crucial role in this
rebalancing of agency. According to David Harvey, media have worked in both an
‘extensional’ mode (connecting the individual to supranational global networks of
information flow) and in an ‘intentional’ mode (according to which the most intimate
interpersonal relationships are inflected by media use) (quoted in Hall, 2011, 599).
Fig. 5. ‘Sweet Lolitas’ at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (2012). Source:
http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/j/japanese-street-style/
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The Victoria and Albert Museum in London has been an important global institutional
agent in the dissemination of academic knowledge about Lolita fashion, actively collecting
Lolita garments as part of its permanent collection and hosting research and social events
connected with the subculture. Documentation of Lolita events at the museum reveal the
spectrum of identities that Lolita fashion is able to encompass (Fig. 5), detaching the style
from any sense of attachment to Japanese cultural authenticity, and in so-doing, effecting
the kind of rupture and displacement that Hall speaks about in relation to identity under
the conditions of modernity. The intimate relationship between the disparate Lolita fans
gathered in this image, and the function of a digital group portrait circulated online and
thereby inserted into the global discourse on Lolita fashion, also demonstrates how
extensional and intentional media operate within a single subculture.
However, the question of individual agency is complicated here since the individuals
are brought together and documented under the auspices of a media institution and this
may, in fact, be evidence for participatory agency being taken away from individuals and
relocated within the institution. This predicament at the heart of contemporary media has
been discussed by Langlois (2013, 91), who has spoken about the ‘paradox of participatory
media’ and the emergence of a ‘new governance of communication’ that has appropriated
individual agency. While Langlois acknowledges the enthusiastic claims that have been
made on behalf of participatory media cultures in empowering users and raising the
potential for democratic agencies to unfold, he also posits a note of caution on the basis
that ‘the locus of power and focus of the governance process is not on content per se, but
on the conditions within which meaning can emerge’ (2013, 103).
If Lolita fans possess agency over the content of their individual fashion ensembles,
do they also possess agency over the conditions within which their identities can
emerge on global social networks? The events at the Victoria and Albert Museum would
suggest that in a fashion world context where there are so many stakeholders –
including museums, fashion labels, pop stars (such as Gwen Stefani) and (it must be
said) scholars of fashion and media – individual agency becomes diluted. In important
ways, this returns us to the question of hegemony and asks us to think of Lolita fashion
in terms of Hall’s (2013) concept of meaning as a social practice, and cultural
production as an ‘ideological battleground’.
What is especially unique about Lolita fashion as a cultural phenomenon is that,
while it has been consistently appropriated by global media networks, and while social
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media, in particular, has exploded the international reach of the style, it still remains
fundamentally connected to an urban epicentre in the Harajuku district of Tokyo,
where streets, department stores, and print magazines continue to transmit the agency
of amateur fans in a rapid, place-specific environment in which participatory agency
over a global phenomenon at a local scale is common. If the process of governance on
participatory media platforms is about defining meaning through cultural value,
shaping cultural perceptions, and ‘the setting up of a horizon of communicative
possibilities and agencies’, the process of governance on the streets is still dispersed
among the individual agencies of Lolita fashion fans, and this is what makes it so
compelling as a cultural phenomenon (Langlois, 2013, 103).
5. Ideology of Mass Culture and the Phenomenon of Lolita Fashion
The issues explored thus far have covered the cultural origins of the Lolita fashion, the
relationship between Lolita fashion and cultural hegemony, and the question of agency
within Lolita fashion. Having originated in the 1980s, Lolita fashion came of age during the
period of postmodernism and has migrated into the digital realm, becoming inflected in
the process by media convergence and the emergence of a fully networked society. In
order to finally situate Lolita fashion culture within the contemporary context of media
studies, it is now necessary to consider the question of ideology and mass culture and to
reflect on the more general significance of Lolita fashion within the wider context of global
media studies.
Speaking about the current state of global mass media culture, Storey has argued that
all consumers should see themselves as cultural producers: ‘selecting, rejecting, making
meanings, attributing value, resisting, and, yes, being duped and manipulated’ (2019, 271).
The crucial recognition expressed in this statement is that we are all, to some extent,
‘duped’ by mass culture and that we cannot avoid this situation, nor live in hope of
revolution. This subtle shift marks a move away from the uncompromisingly political
readings of media and cultural studies by figures such as Baudrillard and Hall, who were
writing at a time when mass culture had not yet been assimilated by global corporations
to the extent that it now has. The ultimately Marxist idea that the illusions of false
consciousness projected by a dominant class could be overthrown has gradually been
replaced by a more compromised, but perhaps more realistic, notion that ‘we must
recognize the difference between different versions of reality, and to know that each can
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require a different politics’ (Storey, 2019, 271). While earlier theorists may have rejected
consumer culture out of hand, thinkers such as Storey have called for the consumer to
become reconciled to consumption. However, this acceptance of consumption still denies
that popular culture ‘is little more than a degraded landscape of commercial and
ideological manipulation, imposed from above in order to make profit and secure social
control’ (Storey, 2019, 271).
Lolita fashion serves as a vivid illustration of the argument that Storey is making. It may,
in fact, be the case that the Lolita fashion fan becomes the model consumer. Why should
this be the case? According to Storey (2019, 272), ‘it is, ultimately, in “production in use”
that questions of meaning, pleasure, ideological effect, incorporation or resistance can be
(contingently) decided’. By ‘production in use’ he means a dialogue between the processes
of production and the activities of consumption that serves as a way of negotiating cultural
hegemony. In ‘production in use’, the consumer ‘always confronts a text or practice in its
material existence as a result of determinate conditions of production’, that is, the
consumer confronts a text or practice in a way that is inflected by the economic system
that has brought it into being, manufactured it, distributed it, advertised it, and made it
available for purchase. However, this does not imply total passivity on the part of the
consumer since just as the consumer is confronted by the commodity, so the commodity
is confronted by the consumer, ‘who in effect produces in use the range of possible
meaning(s)’ (Storey, 2019, 271). Consumer and commodity are thereby locked in a
reciprocal process of mutual self-definition and this is exactly the logic that is at play in
Lolita fashion culture.
A textual analysis will serve to bring these ideas into sharper focus (Fig. 6).
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Fig. 6. ‘Sweet Lolitas’ photographed in Harajuku (ca. 2010). Source: Rahman, 2011.
This group portrait of sweet Lolitas (that is, Lolita fans whose attire emphasises the
‘sweet’ aspects of Lolita, as opposed to the gothic) is one of many globally circulating
images of Lolita fashion that testify to a strong set of shared stylistic conventions – a key
characteristic of a subculture. What is particularly poignant about this image is its
collective nature: seven girls arrange themselves in a tableau, compositionally balanced
according to height and colour, displaying both uniformity in the commodification of the
body as well as subtly differentiated interpretations of kawaii, or ‘cuteness’ (McVeigh, 2000;
Winge, 2008). Dress, from this perspective, includes not only the physical commodities
worn by the girls, but an ensemble of media operations that ‘clothe’ the subject and project
their identity in the form of a group performance. This confirms a key part of this argument,
which is that media users are media producers.
Another striking fact about the image is the degree to which individuation is created
through the repetition of almost identical elements. The shoes are almost all pink but with
different bows; the socks are knee-height but with different weaves; the skirts are
identically plush but are modelled differently through each girl’s individual posture, and
so on, up to and including the highly coiffed big hair styles and stylised make-up. The image
and its circulation testify to the appeal of the fundamental group affinities of a subculture,
achieved through shared practices, rituals, and performances of commodity-based
identity construction. It can therefore be concluded that circulation through global media
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is vital to establishing collective subcultural identity. It is obvious that such an image could
not have been produced without a highly commercialised consumer culture and this
undoubtedly accounts for the sameness of the girls’ accoutrements, while it is also clear
that the exertion of individual agency is so extreme and dedicated in its effects that a range
of possible meanings is produced within the group.
I began this article by referencing Vladimir Nabokov’s seminal novel, Lolita (1955), as
the etymological origins from which Lolita fashion’s name is derived, suggesting that the
word had become a shorthand for what I called ‘the provocative eroticism of innocence in
young girls’. On many levels, this continues to be a useful interpretative touchstone,
making sense as it does, succinctly, of ideas such as the ‘Lolita complex’, most graphically
rendered in the often controversial ‘lolicom manga’ work of artists such as Junko Mizuno
(Pilcher, 2009, 317), with which, as we have noted, Lolita fashion is often mistakenly
conflated and confused. What it obscures, however, is the fact that Nabokov’s novel is a
satire, a first-person narration by Humbert Humbert as he attempts to convince the ‘Ladies
and gentlemen of the jury’ (Nabokov, 1955, 5), whom he repeatedly addresses, of, if not
his outright innocence, then the mitigating circumstances of his paedophiliac crimes.
Unlike the Stanley Kubrick film of the same name, which adopts the viewpoint of a
characterless but all-seeing narrator, Nabokov never straightforwardly serves up Lolita, to
his readers, as a character in her own right: she is, instead, forever mediated through the
distorting lens of Humbert Humbert’s persuasive rhetoric (‘You can always trust a
murderer for a fancy prose style!’ (Nabokov, 1955, 5)).
At the start of this article, I also invoked Antonio Gramsci’s idea of cultural hegemony, a
post-Marxist idea that, closely paralleling Althusserian notions of ideological state apparatus,
postulates a system of cultural normatives, upheld by both a network of notable non-coercive
social institutions (including schools and nuclear families) and popular consensus. This
‘civil society’ is in direct contradistinction, of course, to his ‘political society, which, like
Althusser’s repressive state apparatus, includes institutions, such as police and armies,
that exercise control on their populations coercively. I considered whether Lolita fashion
might be construed as a site of resistance to the cultural hegemony of Japan’s historically
collectivist state, albeit one that operated, finally, on an immoveable and incontestable
capitalist impulse, upon which any individualism could only be expressed through
consumerist choices, that is to say, combinations of purchases from the Body Line fashion
catalogue, or perhaps its digital successors.
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Both of these ideas come to the fore as I consider, briefly, the impact of globalisation
on Lolita fashion. With its visual exuberance of pastels, frills and archaic garment shapes,
there has, since its earliest development, been a danger that Lolita fashion is only ever
regarded as spectacle, exploited by a highly sexualised, male gaze, the very same ticking
time-bomb sent up by Nabokov’s novel. And this happens in spite of Lolita fashion's
credentials as a site of broadly feminist resistance in the face of sexualised stereotypes.
While Winge observes that ‘Japanese Lolitas claim they are not attempting to be sexually
alluring’ (2011, 50), she usefully questions whether their ‘hyperfeminine and hypercute
characteristics’ (2011, 62) might be liable to easy misinterpretation. Gagné notes he
‘often saw middle-aged men (foreign and otherwise) with massive cameras ogling the
girls gathered in the Harajuku [...] many people’, he continues, ‘don’t ask permission to
take photographs, and just snap away as they stroll around the area’ (2008, 140). While
the non-visual practice of Lolita, from its ritualised liminality as identified by Winge
(2008, 25-7), to the distinctively childlike and anachronistic noripīgo speech patterns
mentioned earlier, has always been precarious, it is all but certain to be lost in translation
once exported to non-Japanese speaking countries of the West.
In his seminal study of Orientalism, Edward Said forcefully argues that Gramsci’s
cultural hegemony is ‘an indispensable concept for any understanding of cultural life in
the industrial West. It is hegemony’, he writes, ‘that gives Orientalism the durability and
the strength I have been speaking about [...] a collective notion identifying “us”
Europeans as against all “those” non-Europeans’ (Said, 2003, 7). In its exportation from
Japan to the West, Lolita fashion soon becomes a silenced Other, reduced to a visual,
sexualised spectacle. Writing about her experiences as a Lolita in Minnesota, Laura
Blauersouth documents the surprise of fellow diners in a tea-room, ‘there is a momentary
pause while they silently wonder if this is some sort of sexual fetish [...] our culture’, she
explains, ‘sees anything that grabs attention and shows off its otherness as a bid for sexual
attention. It is also an undeniable fact that our culture objectifies little girls as sexually
forbidden fruit. Combine the two, and Lolita seems designed to make people think the
worst’ (Blauersouth, 2011, 314). American popular culture has fared no better with the
Lolita trope. For every darkly complex Darla or Drusilla character from Joss Whedon’s
multi-series teen-vampire drama, Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003), there is strewn
a litany of failures cut from the same cloth. Gwen Stefani, mentioned earlier, may have
been met with opprobrium by Japan’s Lolita subculture, but got off lightly compared to
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Avril Lavigne’s ‘Hello Kitty’ (2014), or Alisha Attic’s career-ending Japanese Dream
(1997) that came before. None of them failed quite as spectacularly as Zack Snyder’s
Sucker Punch (2011) whose porcelain-faced, pigtailed Babydoll failed to win over
audiences and was reviewed as ‘Misogyny disguised as empowerment’ with just a paltry
22% rating on Rotten Tomatoes (Rotten Tomatoes, 2011).
6. Conclusion
Yet, if America gets Lolita fashion wrong, it also holds up a mirror to its limitations.
Far from home, the cracks in the apparently flawless face of Japanese Lolita subculture
begin to show. Writes Blauersouth:
Lolita subculture, at its worst, is a materialistic, classist, and racist hobby. The sheer
amount of money that can be spent on clothes, shoes, accessories, and other
paraphernalia is astounding - and for some, a necessary component of the subculture
[...] it has internalized a strict Victorian hierarchy, enforced with vicious online forums,
scathing critique, exclusion, outright bullying, and racist screeds on how certain races
just don’t do Lolita. (Blauersouth, 2011, 315)
If Lolita fashion challenges the ordered, measured cultural hegemony of Japan with
its exuberance and individuated consumerism, it is also challenged by its own vicious
online policing. And if Lolita fashion, Orientalised and othered in the way that Edward
Said describes, challenges a constant predilection, in the west, to immediately sexualise
difference, it is also challenged by its own shamelessly Eurocentric and relentless
fetishisation of whiteness. It is telling that, in 2014 as Lolita fashion struck a critical mass
as a global phenomenon, Japanese toymakers, Sanrio, shocked by the world by
reinforcing that Eurocentricity and advising that ‘Hello Kitty’ - by far the most
internationally recognisable icon to be co-opted by Lolita fashion - was not a cat at all,
but a young British girl in the third-grade, living outside London (Petri, 2016, para. 4-5).
In many ways the adoption of Lolita (predominantly Gothic Lolita) fashion in Europe
sees the wheel turn full circle: Lolita fashion was an invention by Japanese girls inspired
by Victorian or nineteenth-century European fashions; now European women are inspired
by Lolita fashion's take on the same. That fashion has always borrowed from the historical
past, or, more precisely, re-articulations of the historical past, is nothing new.
What is interesting in the case of Lolita fashion, however, is the ways in that it reinscribes the importance of settled hierarchies of race and class. Blauersouth observes that
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'many of the Japanese Lolita models are white (or are digitally altered to look like it)' (2011,
315). In the hands of 'primarily Caucasian' (Blauersouth, 2011, 315) Minnesotans, or the
hands of its European scene, the whiteness of Lolita's own community becomes celebrated
and fetishised, an ugly and putrid reflection of the high colonial impulses from which those
same fashions derive. And, as we have seen, Lolita fashion does not come cheaply either:
whether in Harajuku or Minnesota, the financial cost of mimicking the fashions of
porcelain dolls, only ever given to wealthy children, Lolita fashion success comes at a high
price, a barrier to entry that effectively operates as class segregation to mirror its racial
segregation. Whatever political radicalism was latent in Lolita fashion, however much it
ever seemed to provide a countercultural space within which to actively resist a dominant
cultural hegemony, either or a national or international level, the built-in conservatism of
Lolita fashion, together with its early emphasis on etiquette and deportment, seems to
condemn it as an evolutionary, sartorial dead-end, a worn out idea that starts to fade as
quickly as it came to life.
As a case study in performed postmodern identities negotiated through consumerism,
Lolita fashion lays bare the socio-economic contradictions of its cultural hegemony and
milieu, highlighting, too, the ways in which these structures morph and change in the light
of the digital revolution and its concomitant globalisation. Equally significantly, it
illustrates, perfectly, the phenomenon of ‘production in use’, defined by Storey, which is a
means through which the mediation of the body through consumerist fashion trends
enacts the fundamental relationship of the subject of modern identity to the ideologies of
mass culture, sometimes with disquieting consequences. In doing so, it renders visible, in an
extreme way, the negotiations of self and society that we all, as highly mediated postmodern
subjects, must contend with.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
SHUAI Ziwei is currently a doctoral student at University College London, after having obtained her BA in
Digital Culture from King’s College London and her MA at UCL. Exploring digital politics, the history of network
technologies, subcultures and communities in the digital world, internet cultures, cultural theory and education,
and mobile media, she has developed a keen eye for film critique and a strong interest for film directing. Moving
forward with her academic career, she is committed to investigating these fields in relation to the new
generations and the future of social and digitally mediated interactions.
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