Skip to Content

Search: {{$root.lsaSearchQuery.q}}, Page {{$root.page}}

 

 

CJS Noon Lecture Series | Staged Seduction: Selling Dreams in a Tokyo Host Club

Akiko Takeyama, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, University of Kansas
Thursday, November 10, 2016
12:00-1:30 PM
Room 1636 School of Social Work Building Map
In the host clubs of Tokyo's Kabuki-chō red-light district, ambitious young men seek their fortunes by selling love, romance, companionship, and sometimes sex to female consumers for exorbitant sums of money. Staged Seduction reveals a world where all intimacies and feigned feelings are fair game for the hosts who employ feathered bangs, polished nails, fine European suits, and the sensitivity of the finest salesmen to create a fantasy for wealthy women seeking an escape from the everyday.

Akiko Takeyama's investigation of this beguiling underground "love business" provides an intimate window into Japanese host clubs and the lives of hosts, clients, club owners, and managers. The club is a place where fantasies are pursued and the art of seduction isn't merely about romance; a complex set of transactions emerges. Like a casino of love, the host club is a site of desperation, aspiration, and hope, in which both hosts and clients are eager to roll the dice. Takeyama reveals the aspirational mode not only of the host club, but also of a Japanese society built on the commercialization of aspiration, seducing its citizens out of the present and into a future where hopes and dreams are imaginable—and billions of dollars can be made.

Akiko Takeyama is an assistant professor of anthropology and women, gender, and sexuality studies at the University of Kansas. Her research interests lie in changing gender, sexuality, and class dynamics in contemporary Japan. Her first book, Staged Seduction: Selling Dreams in a Tokyo Host Club, (2016 Stanford University Press) theorizes the commercialization of feelings, emotions, and intimate relationships among socially marginalized population —the youth and women— in Japan’s service-centered economy. Her second book project, tentatively entitled “Affect Economy of Human Trafficking in Japan,” will explore human affect ―hope, fear, and a sense of vulnerability― in the analysis of 21st century capitalism, complicating such legal categories as human rights and individual consent especially when sexual and economic exploitation are carried out in the name of individual choice.
Building: School of Social Work Building
Event Type: Lecture / Discussion
Tags: Anthropology, Asia, Japanese Studies
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Center for Japanese Studies, International Institute, Women's and Gender Studies Department, Asian Languages and Cultures