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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
(滋賀大学)
저널정보
중앙대학교 일본연구소 일본연구 일본연구 제64집
발행연도
수록면
319 - 337 (19page)

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초록· 키워드

This paper examines the contemporary Japanese slang term kimoi (“gross/creepy”), derived from kimochi warui (“disgusting”), and investigates how its affective core—disgust and avoidance—is represented in classical Japanese literature. First, based on modern usage, it provisionally identifies key semantic components of kimoi, such as incomprehensibility toward others, aversion, and visual unease. As a point of reference, it then considers an instance of kimochi warui in Osamu Dazai’s Joseito (1939). Next, the study analyzes classical vocabulary that conveys related sensations: mutsukashi (visual discomfort), nikushi (disgust/hatred), and kitanashi (a mixed sense of repulsion and impurity). Through these examples, it argues that although kimoi is a relatively new word, it can be situated within a longer lineage of expressions of disgust, avoidance, and social distancing. The paper further suggests that, while continuous with earlier lexical resources, kimoi has expanded in function as an evaluative term directed at other people.
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목차

  1. 1. 「現代語としての「キモい」
  2. 2. 古典文学における「キモい」―『枕草子』を例として
  3. 3. まとめにかえて
  4. Abstract

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