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A Postmodern Reading of Gintama: Parody, Metafiction, and the Problem of Subjectivity in Japanese Popular Culture

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Yi Zeng

Wuxi Taihu University, Wuxi , Jiangsu, China

Abstract

This article examines Gintama through a postmodern framework, arguing that the series mobilizes parody, pastiche, and metafiction not merely as stylistic devices but as critical strategies for interrogating cultural authority, historical narration, and subject formation in Japanese modernity. Rather than treating Gintama as a site of intertextual excess alone, the analysis demonstrates how its hybrid Edo setting and persistent self-reflexivity destabilize distinctions between past and present, fiction and reality, and tradition and modernity. Drawing on theories of postmodernism and subjectivity, the article further explores how the series reconfigures identity as historically contingent and challenges modernist classifications of normativity and deviance. By situatingGintamawithin broader debates on anime and postmodern culture, the article argues that postmodernism operates not as a purely Western formation, but as a critical logic that emerges across diverse historical contexts.

Keywords

  • Gintama
  • postmodernism
  • anime
  • parody
  • pastiche
  • metafiction
  • Japanese modernity
  • subjectivity

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