NAWA: Journal of Japanese Studies
Vol. 3 No. 1 (2026): March 2026

Directive Speech Acts by Child Characters in the Japanese Film Monster (2023): A Pragmatic Analysis

Gading, Erland Rakarussi (Unknown)
Kasmawati, Kasmawati (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
09 Mar 2026

Abstract

This study investigates the forms and types of directive speech acts produced by child characters in the Japanese film Monster (2023) directed by Hirokazu Koreeda. Using a qualitative approach, the study analyzes 20 directive utterances drawn from the film’s dialogue to examine how directive meanings are realized in emotionally and socially complex interactions. The data were selected by identifying utterances spoken by child characters that pragmatically function to prompt the addressee to perform or refrain from performing an action. The analysis is informed by speech act theory and contextual interpretation through Dell Hymes’ SPEAKING framework, enabling systematic examination of linguistic form, pragmatic function, and interactional context. The findings reveal that directive speech acts are realized through direct and indirect as well as literal and non-literal forms. Among these, indirect literal directive speech acts of the requestive type occur most frequently. This pattern indicates that directive intentions are commonly conveyed through interrogative or declarative structures rather than explicit imperatives, particularly in emotionally sensitive interactions such as family communication and peer relationships affected by bullying. Overall, the study demonstrates that child characters exhibit pragmatic awareness by employing directive strategies that balance communicative effectiveness with interpersonal consideration.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

nawa

Publisher

Subject

Arts Humanities Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media

Description

Focus and Scope This journal publishes research articles on Japanese Studies, including Japanese Linguistics and Education, History and Culture, and Literature. Its scope is international in that it welcomes articles from academics, researchers, and university students. The articles contribute to ...