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E-grāmata: Emoticons, Kaomoji, and Emoji: The Transformation of Communication in the Digital Age

Edited by (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany), Edited by
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This collection offers a comprehensive treatment of emoticons, kaomoji, and emoji, examining these digital pictograms and ideograms from a range of perspectives to comprehend their increasing role in the transformation of communication in the digital age. Featuring a detailed introduction and eleven contributions from an interdisciplinary group of scholars, the volume begins by outlining the history and development of the field, situating emoticons, kaomoji, and emoji – expressing a variety of moods and emotional states, facial expressions, as well as all kinds of everyday objects– as both a topic of global relevance but also within multimodal, semiotic, picture theoretical, cultural and linguistic research. The book shows how the interplay of these systems with text can alter and shape the meaning and content of messaging and examines how this manifests itself through different lenses, including the communicative, socio-political, aesthetic, and cross-cultural. Making the case for further study on emoticons, kaomoji, and emoji and their impact on digital communication, this book is key reading for students and scholars in sociolinguistics, media studies, Japanese studies, and language and communication.

List of Contributors
vii
1 Emoticons, Kaomoji, and Emoji: The Transformation of Communication in the Digital Age
1(22)
Elena Giannoulis
Lukas R.A. Wilde
PART I Intercultural Mediations
23(60)
2 Not Everyone As: Or, the Question of Emoji as `Universal' Expression
25(19)
Jonathan E. Abel
3 Cultural Literacy in the Empire of Emoji Signs: Who Is?
44(23)
Alisa Freedman
4 Emoticons: Digital Lingua Franca or a Culture-Specific Product Leading to Misunderstandings?
67(16)
Marzena Karpinska
Paula Kurzawska
Katarzyna Rozanska
PART II Intersectional Mediations
83(42)
5 `Impact taisetsu da!': The Use of Emoji and Kaomoji in Danso Escort Blogs Between Gender Expression and Emotional Labor
85(19)
Marta Fanasca
6 Emoticons in Social Media: The Case of Japanese Facebook Users
104(21)
Michaela Oberwinkler
PART III Linguistic Mediations
125(44)
7 `Iconographetic Communication' in Digital Media: Emoji in WhatsApp, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook---From a Linguistic Perspective
127(21)
Christina Margrit Siever
8 A Cultural Exploration of the Use of Kaomoji, Emoji, and Kigo in Japanese Blog-Post Narratives
148(21)
Barry Kavanagh
PART IV Pictorial Mediations
169(40)
9 The Elephant in the Room of Emoji Research: Or, Pictoriality, to what Extent?
171(26)
Lukas R.A. Wilde
10 Construction of Iconicity in Scenes of Kaomoji
197(12)
Risa Matsuda
PART V Material Mediations
209(38)
11 Who Is Afraid of Mr. Yuk? The Display of the Basic Emotion of Disgust in an `Analogue Precursor' to Contemporary Emoji
211(16)
Alexander Christian
12 From Digital to Analog: Kaomoji on the Votive Tablets of an Anime Pilgrimage
227(20)
Dale K. Andrews
Index 247
Elena Giannoulis is Junior Professor for Japanese Literature at the Friedrich Schlegel Graduate School of Literary Studies at Freie Universität Berlin, Germany.

Lukas R.A. Wilde is Post-Doctoral Research Associate at the Collaborative Research Center (CRC) 923 "Threatened OrderSocieties under Stress" at the University of Tuebingen, Germany.