The rise and fall of modern Japanese literature /
Material type:
TextPublication details: Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, 2018.Description: 1 online resource (v, 401 pages) : illustrationsISBN: - 9780226545134
- REF 895.609 T71
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| REFERENCE BOOKS | LAPULAPU-CEBU INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE REFERENCE SECTION | REF 895.609 T71 2018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C1 | Available | 001906 |
Browsing LAPULAPU-CEBU INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE shelves, Shelving location: REFERENCE SECTION Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
| REF 895.608005 C76 2005 Contemporary Japanese literature : an anthology of fiction, film, and other writing since 1945 / | REF 895.609 K17 The uses of literature in modern Japan : histories and cultures of the book / | REF 895.609 K25 1988 The pleasures of Japanese literature / | REF 895.609 T71 2018 The rise and fall of modern Japanese literature / | REF 895.6090042 H53 Transformations of sensibility : the phenomenology of Meiji literature / | REF 895.6090042 K82 1993 Origins of modern Japanese literature / | REF 895.609352996 B76 Playing in the shadows : fictions of race and blackness in postwar Japanese literature / |
The Rise and Fall of Modern Japanese Literature tells the story of Japanese literature from its start in the 1870s, against the backdrop of a rapidly coalescing modernity, to the present. John Whittier Treat takes up both cononical and forgotten works, the nonliterary as well as the literary, and pays special attention to the Japanese state's hand in shaping literature throughtout the country's nineteenth-century industrialization, a half-century of empire and war, its post-1945 reconstruction, and the challenges of the twenty-first century to modern nationhood. Beginning with journalistic accounts of female criminals in the aftermath of the Meiji civil war, Treat moves on to explore how novelist Higuchi Ichiyō's stories engaged with modern liberal economics, sex work, and marriage; credits Natsume Sōseki's satire I Am a Cat with the triumph of print over orality in the early twentieth century; and links narcissism in the visual arts with that of the Japanese I-novel on the eve of the country's turn to militarism in the 1930s. From imperialism to Americanization and the new media of television and manga, from boogie-woogie music to Yoshimoto Banana and Murakami Haruki, Treat traces the stories Japanese audiences expected literature to tell and those they did not. The book concludes with a classic of Japanese science fiction and a description of present-day crises writers face in a Japan hobbled by a changing economy and unprecedented natural and manmade catastropes. The Rise and Fall of Modern Japanese Literature reinterprets the "end of literature"--A phrase heard often in Japan--as a clarion call to understand how literary culture worldwide now teeters on a historic precipice, one at which Japan's writers may have arriaved just a moment before the rest of us--back cover
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