Citations:erokawa


 * 2011, Maria Korusiewicz, "The Cute or the Scary: Japanese Youth Subcultures in Contemporary Japanese Society", Asian Journal of Literature, Culture and Society, April 2011, page 71:
 * This “double effect” is manifested in combination of kawaii and eroticism popular among young women who have already outgrown school uniforms, but feel compelled to mix a childlike pinkish style with elements provoking sexual connotations (the so-called ero-kawa look).
 * 2011, "Online Shopping Guide", Nth, Issue 1 (2011), page 52:
 * [URL redacted] is known for its 'erokawa' (sexy and cute) lines of lingerie, lounge wear and related products.
 * 2016, Hiroshi Aoyagi & Shu Min Yuen, "When erotic meets cute: Erokawa and the public expression of female sexuality in contemporary Japan", East Asian Journal of Popular Culture, Volume 2, Number 1, April 2016, page 99:
 * More significantly, the erokawa phenomenon makes visible the tensions between the patriarchal regulation of women’s sexuality and young women’s attempts to assert agency and autonomy in contemporary Japanese society.
 * 2021, Salome Czapiweski, "EROKAWA", Kawaii Agency, 2021 (◯):
 * Erokawa is the wide-eyed gaze used to entrance a partner, knowing that those same, glossy eyes will be looking back up at them from below.