Handbook of modern and contemporary Japanese women writers /
The Handbook of Modern and Contemporary Japanese Women Writers offers a comprehensive overview of women writers in Japan, from the late 19th century to the early 21st. Featuring 24 newly written contributions from scholars in the field-representing expertise from North America, Europe, Japan, and Au...
Бусад зохиолчид: | |
---|---|
Формат: | Licensed eBooks |
Хэл сонгох: | англи |
Хэвлэсэн: |
Amsterdam :
Amsterdam University Press,
[2023]
|
Цуврал: | Japan Documents handbooks.
|
Онлайн хандалт: | https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctv37363tq |
Агуулга:
- Contributors
- Preface: The color red / Rebecca Copeland
- Introduction: When women write / Rebecca Copeland
- Part 1: Expanding genre and the exploration of gendered writing
- 1: When women write history: Nogami Yaeko, Ariyoshi Sawako, and Nagai Michiko / Susan W. Furukawa
- 2. Writing within and beyond genre: Ōkura Teruko, Miyano Murako, Togawa Masako, Miyabe Miyuki, and Minato Kanae and mystery fiction / Quillon Arkenstone
- 3. Feminist "failed" reproductive futures in speculative fiction: Ōhara Mariko, Murata Sayaka, and Ueda Sayuri / Kazue Harada
- Part 2: Owning the classics
- 4. Tales of Ise grows up: Higuchi Ichiyō, Kurahashi Yumiko, and Kawakami Mieko / Emily Levine
- 5. Japanese women writers and folktales: "Urashima Tarō" in the literary production of Ōba Minako and Kurahashi Yumiko / Luciana Cardi
- 6. Women and the non-human animal: rewriting the canine classic-Tsushima Yūko, Tawada Yōko, Matsuura Rieko, and Sakuraba Kazuki / Lucy Fraser
- Part 3: Sexual trauma, survival and the search for the food life
- 7. Writing women and sexuality: Tamura Toshiko and Sata Ineko / Michiko Suzuki
- 8. Voicing herstory's silence: three women playwrights-Hasegawa Shigure, Ariyoshi Sawako, and Dakemoto Ayumi / Barbara Hartley
- 9. Writing women's happiness in the 1980s: labor and care in Kometani Foumiko, Hayashi Mariko and Yoshimoto Banana / Nozomi Uematsu
- 10. Risky business: overcoming traumatic experiences in the works of Kakuta Mitsuyo and Kanehara Hitomi / David S. Holloway
- Part 4: Food, family, and the feminist appetite
- 11. Watching the detectives: writing as feminist praxis in Enchi Fumiko and Kurahashi Yumiko / Julia C. Bullock
- 12. Food as feminist critique: Osaki Midori, Kanai Mieko, and Ogawa Yōko / Hitomi Yoshio
- Part 5: Beyond the patriarchal family
- 13. "The mommy trap": childless women write motherhood-Kōno Taeko, Takahashi Takako, and Murata Sayaka / Amanda C. Seaman
- 14. Women and queer kinships: Matsuura Rieko, Fujino Chiya, and Murata Sayaka / Anna Specchio
- Part 6: Age is just a number
- 15. Beyond shōjo fantasy: women writers writing girlhood-Yoshiya Nobuko, Tanabe Seiko, and Hayashi Mariko / Hiromi Tsuchiya Dollase
- 16. Writing the aged woman: Enchi Fumiko and Tanabe Seiko / Sohyun Chun
- 17. Humor and aging: Ogino Anna, Itō Hiromi, and Kanai Mieko / Tomoko Aoyama
- Part 7: Colonies, war, aftermath
- 18. Women and war: Yosano Akiko and Hayashi Fumiko / Noriko J. Horiguchi
- 19. Women and colonies: Shanghai and Manchuria in the autobiographical writings of Hayashi Kyōko, Sawachi Hisae, and Miyao Tomiko / Lianying Shan.