Artigo Revisado por pares

Reach Out and Touch Someone: Thinking Through Sanrio's Social Communication Empire

2011; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 31; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/10371397.2011.560262

ISSN

1469-9338

Autores

Christine R. Yano,

Tópico(s)

Media, Gender, and Advertising

Resumo

Hello Kitty (b. 1974) in the year 2009 was all grown up. Indeed, Sanrio, the mouthless feline's maker, took the opportunity for a year-long celebration of her 35th anniversary that extended into 2010. Thirty-five: the year marks the standard end of young adult promise in Japan, after which traditionally new employment opportunities close, scholarships for post-baccalaureate education end, and fertility rates in women decline. But what does 35 years mean for a product? More specifically, what does it mean for a product that has achieved iconic status as a symbol of youthful innocence dubbed kawaii (cute) in ever-widening, global settings? Among other things, 35 years suggests the possibility of true trans-generational appeal, especially with mother-daughter pairs of Hello Kitty fans. In the case of Hello Kitty, 35 years also signals a sufficient time span from which nostalgia may be considered viable and ultimately marketable. In this paper I use Hello Kitty's 35th anniversary as a lens upon kawaii – Japanese Cute – by which we might look backward and forward to the consumer culture surrounding this now 'middle-aged' object, primarily in Japan, but extended through its global applications.

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