Description

Book Synopsis
For Oe Kenzaburo, a Japanese novelist who won the 1994 Noble prize in literature, William Faulkner is not so much a father of Yoknapatawpha as he is a critic of the masculine possessiveness attributed to the creation of the imaginary county. Faulkner and Oe: The Self-Critical Imagination focuses on the Faulknerian influence on Oe''s satirical or self-critical imagination-especially on his feminist or hermaphroditic criticism of the male I contained within the shosetsu (novel). Akio Kimura expertly investigates Oe''s feminist turn in his novels in the 1980s as a criticism of this I as an authoritarian first-person narrator. Oe considers this concept to be a disruptive reflection of Japanese society''s established order. Oe''s response to such a disruption is the introduction of a series of metaphors utilized in order to represent Faulkner''s individualism and the subsequent deconstruction of Japanese autocracy. Drawing on Kofman, Irigaray, and Derrida, this book explores how Faulkner''

Table of Contents
Part 1 Preface Part 2 Acknowledgements Chapter 3 Introduction Chapter 4 A Yoknapatawpha of Oe's Own Chapter 5 The Feminine Chapter 6 The "Problems of the Spirit" / the "Matters of the Soul" Chapter 7 Oe's "I" and Faulkner's "is" Part 8 Bibliography Part 9 Index Part 10 About the Author

Faulkner and Oe

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    A Paperback by Akio Kimura

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      Publisher: University Press of America
      Publication Date: 1/26/2007 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780761836636, 978-0761836636
      ISBN10: 0761836632

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      For Oe Kenzaburo, a Japanese novelist who won the 1994 Noble prize in literature, William Faulkner is not so much a father of Yoknapatawpha as he is a critic of the masculine possessiveness attributed to the creation of the imaginary county. Faulkner and Oe: The Self-Critical Imagination focuses on the Faulknerian influence on Oe''s satirical or self-critical imagination-especially on his feminist or hermaphroditic criticism of the male I contained within the shosetsu (novel). Akio Kimura expertly investigates Oe''s feminist turn in his novels in the 1980s as a criticism of this I as an authoritarian first-person narrator. Oe considers this concept to be a disruptive reflection of Japanese society''s established order. Oe''s response to such a disruption is the introduction of a series of metaphors utilized in order to represent Faulkner''s individualism and the subsequent deconstruction of Japanese autocracy. Drawing on Kofman, Irigaray, and Derrida, this book explores how Faulkner''

      Table of Contents
      Part 1 Preface Part 2 Acknowledgements Chapter 3 Introduction Chapter 4 A Yoknapatawpha of Oe's Own Chapter 5 The Feminine Chapter 6 The "Problems of the Spirit" / the "Matters of the Soul" Chapter 7 Oe's "I" and Faulkner's "is" Part 8 Bibliography Part 9 Index Part 10 About the Author

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