Fate, Nature, and Literary Form: The Politics of the Tragic in Japanese Literature

Fate, Nature, and Literary Form: The Politics of the Tragic in Japanese Literature

by Kinya Nishi
Fate, Nature, and Literary Form: The Politics of the Tragic in Japanese Literature

Fate, Nature, and Literary Form: The Politics of the Tragic in Japanese Literature

by Kinya Nishi

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Overview

This study is a theoretical reconsideration of the concept of the “tragic” combined with detailed analyses of Japanese literary texts. Inspired by contemporary critical discourse (especially the works by such thinkers as Theodor Adorno, Fredric Jameson and Raymond Williams), the author challenges both exotic and postmodern representation of Japanese culture as “the other” of the West. By examining the social backgrounds of artists’ endeavors to create new literary forms, the author unveils a rich tradition of tragic literature that, unlike the dominant local tradition of naturalism, has registered the unbridgeable gap between universal ideals and social values at a particular historical moment.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781644690680
Publisher: Academic Studies Press
Publication date: 07/14/2020
Series: Studies in Comparative Literature and Intellectual History
Pages: 168
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.44(d)

About the Author

Kinya Nishi is a professor of aesthetics and intellectual history at Konan University, Japan. He has published books and articles exploring the discursive formation of cultural tradition in the context of modern Japan. He has held visiting research positions at the University of Sussex and Queen Mary, University of London.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Preface

Part One: The Historical Development of the Tragic in Japanese Literature

1. Approaching the Idea of Tragedy in the Non-West

2. Tragic Dramaturgy in Classical Japanese Theater

a.) Zeami b.) Chikamatsu Monzaemon

3. Tragic Individualism in Modern Japanese Fiction

a.) Natsume Sōseki b.) Ōe Kenzaburō

Part Two: The Dialectics of Nature in Japanese Intellectual History

4. The Dilemma of Multicultural Aesthetics

5. Japanese Modernity and the Cultural Configuration of Nature

a.) Naturalism and National Identity b.) From Protest to Conformism c.) The Return of the Mother in Postwar Criticism

Part Three: Social Crisis and Literary Form

6. Matsuo Bashō’s Realism

7. Hiroshima and the Poetics of Death

8. Narrative after Fukushima

Bibliography
Index

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