Showcasing Japan's astonishingly varied culture of cute, this volume
takes the reader on a dazzling and adorable visual journey through all
things kawaii. Although some trace the phenomenon of kawaii as far back
as Japan's Taisho era, it emerged most visibly in the 1970s when
schoolgirls began writing in big, bubbly letters complete with tiny
hearts and stars. From cute handwriting came manga, Hello Kitty, and
Harajuku, and the kawaii aesthetic now affects every aspect of Japanese
life. As colorful as its subject matter, this book contains numerous
interviews with illustrators, artists, fashion designers, and scholars.
It traces the roots of the movement from sociological and
anthropological perspectives and looks at kawaii's darker side as it
morphs into gothic and gloomy iterations. Best of all, it includes
hundreds of colorful photographs that capture kawaii's ubiquity: on the
streets and inside homes, on lunchboxes and airplanes, in haute couture
and street fashion, in cafés, museums, and hotels.