ABSTRACT

Female Masculinity and the Business of Emotions in Tokyo investigates the novel “emotion business” of dansō escorting as a phenomenon emerging between gender performativity and pop-culture, commodified relationships and the wish for self-expression.

Fanasca documents the dreams, ambitions and fears of young crossdresser escorts negotiating their identity with and within the Japanese society, as well as those of crossdresser escorts’ clients: women looking for the perfect man and the opportunity to experience emotions. Combining anthropological, sociological and gender studies theories with an ethnographic approach, Fanasca argues that dansō crossdressing is the tool used by a sector of Japanese women to resist the heteronormative and patriarchal society and its expectations, while reinventing themselves and their identities looking for self-actualization.

Female Masculinity and the Business of Emotions Tokyo is an interdisciplinary work which will interest both scholars and students of Japanese studies, gender studies, and anthropology.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|23 pages

Gender identity, performativity and fantasy

The case of dansō escorting

chapter 2|27 pages

Walk like a man, talk like a man

Working with dansō in Akihabara

chapter 3|23 pages

Who are dansō?

chapter 4|16 pages

Identity and human relationships

chapter 5|27 pages

The customers' perspective

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion