Paradox and Representation: Silenced Voices in the Narratives of Nakagami Kenji

Paradox and Representation: Silenced Voices in the Narratives of Nakagami Kenji

by Machiko Iwahashi Ishikawa
Paradox and Representation: Silenced Voices in the Narratives of Nakagami Kenji

Paradox and Representation: Silenced Voices in the Narratives of Nakagami Kenji

by Machiko Iwahashi Ishikawa

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Overview

How can the "voiceless" voice be represented? This primary question underpins lshikawa's analysis of selected work by Buraku writer, Nakagami Kenji (1946-1992). In spite of his Buraku background, Nakagami's privilege as a writer made it difficult for him to "hear" and "represent" those voices silenced by mainstream social structures in Japan. This "paradox of representing the silenced voice" is the key theme of the book. Gayatri Spivak theorizes the (im)possibility of representing the voice of "subalterns," those oppressed by imperialism, patriarchy and heteronomativity. Arguing for Burakumin as Japan's "subalterns," Ishikawa draws on Spivak to analyze Nakagami' s texts.

The first half of the book revisits the theme of the transgressive Burakumin man. This section includes analysis of a seldom discussed narrative of a violent man and his silenced wife. The second half of the book focuses on the rarely heard voices of Burakumin women from the Akiyuki trilogy. Satoko, the prostitute, unknowingly commits incest with her half-brother, Akiyuki. The aged Yuki sacrifices her youth in a brothel to feed her fatherless family. The mute Moyo remains traumatized by rape. lshikawa' s close reading of Nakagami's representation of the silenced voices of these sexually stigmatized women is this book's unique contribution to Nakagami scholarship.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501751950
Publisher: Cornell East Asia Series
Publication date: 03/15/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 330
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Machiko Ishikawa is Lecturer at the Global Education Center, Surugadai University. She previously held positions as a sessional lecturer and research assistant in the University of Tasmania's Department of Japanese. She has contributed essays to Cultural and Social Division in Contemporary Japan and Gender, Costume, Textiles, Technique.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. The Paradox of Representation
2. The Voice of a Transgressive Young Man
3. The Voice of an Illegitimate Son
4. The Voice of an Incestuous Sister
5. The Voices of Aged Buraku Women
Conclusion

What People are Saying About This

Nina Cornyetz

The study has the potential to be a valuable and original contribution to the current English language studies on Nakagami Kenji. The argument is bold and convincing and the use of theory is generally appropriate and accurate. The study is on the whole well researched and in general appropriate sources are cited, with exceptions noted.

Tim Amos

This is an ambitious book that offers insights into the work of Nakagami Kenji by theorizing him as a thoughtful writer of the subaltern in the Japanese context. It seeks to uncover a deep criticality and perceptiveness in his work mostly in relation to female subjects who have heretofore been neglected by many scholars.

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