Miyako Inoue (linguistic anthropologist)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Miyako Inoue (born 1962) is an Associate Professor in the Department of Cultural and Social Anthropology at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. She is a prominent linguistic anthropologist who combines a concerted focus on social theory with a rigorous analysis of language in social life.
Miyako Inoue teaches linguistic anthropology and the anthropology of Japan. Her recent book Vicarious Language: the Political Economy of Gender and Speech in Japan (University of California Press), examines a phenomenon commonly called "women's language" in Japanese modern society, and offers a genealogy showing its critical linkage with Japan's national and capitalist modernity.
Professor Inoue's recent articles include "The Listening Subject of Japanese Modernity and His Auditory Double: Citing, Sighting, and Siting the Modern Japanese Woman" (2003), and "What does Language Remember?: Indexical Order and the Naturalized History of Japanese Women" (2003).
[edit] External links
- Works by or about Miyako Inoue (linguistic anthropologist) in libraries (WorldCat catalog)