Complicit fictions : the subject in the modern Japanese prose narrative /
In Complicit Fictions, James Fujii challenges traditional approaches to the study of Japanese narratives and Japanese culture in general. He employs current Western literary-critical theory to reveal the social and political contest inherent in modern Japanese literature and also confronts recent br...
المؤلف الرئيسي: | |
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التنسيق: | Licensed eBooks |
اللغة: | الإنجليزية |
منشور في: |
Berkeley :
University of California Press,
©1993.
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سلاسل: | Twentieth-century Japan ;
2. |
الوصول للمادة أونلاين: | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=10006 |
جدول المحتويات:
- Narrating Resentment through Urban-Rural Tension: Shimazaki Toson's Kyushujin
- Changing Metaphors: From Vertical Hierarchy to Centralization in Toson't Hakai
- Between Stye and Language: the Meiji Sublect and Natsume Soseki's Neko
- Death, Empire, and the Search for History in Natsume Soseki's Kokoro
- Claiming the Urban Landscape: Tokuda Shusei as Discursive Creation
- From Sericulture to Piece-work: Visualizing the "Rowdy" Subject in Shusei's Arakure
- Epilogue: the Kindai Shosetsu and Origuchi Shinobu.