Description

Book Synopsis

The book centres around the topic of subjectivity and self-representation in contemporary Japanese literature and offers a new approach to the genre of shishōsetsu (the I-novel).

It reassesses the works of Dazai Osamu, Ōe Kenzaburō, Endō Shūsaku, Murakami Haruki, and of the translingual writers - Mizumura Minae, Hideo Levy, Tawada Yōko - to expose the wide-ranging treatment of personal experiences, and the intricate relations between the characters, the narrator, and the writing persona.

In the context of world fiction and autobiography theories, the book investigates literary and linguistic challenges in expressing the “self.” The shishōsetsu are explored as stories of constructing identities between cultures, languages, literary canons, and testimonies of untranslatability of the self.



Table of Contents
Self and subjectivity in contemporary Japanese fiction – theories in autobiography (Paul Ricoeur, Philippe Lejeune, John Paul Eakin, Serge Doubrovsky) – world literature – comparative literature – cultural translation – cognitive functions of untranslatability – authorship in Japanese literature

The “I” in the Making: Rethinking the Japanese

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    A Hardback by Barbara Michalak-Pikulska, Justyna Weronika Kasza

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 21/12/2020
      ISBN13: 9783631829196, 978-3631829196
      ISBN10: 3631829191

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The book centres around the topic of subjectivity and self-representation in contemporary Japanese literature and offers a new approach to the genre of shishōsetsu (the I-novel).

      It reassesses the works of Dazai Osamu, Ōe Kenzaburō, Endō Shūsaku, Murakami Haruki, and of the translingual writers - Mizumura Minae, Hideo Levy, Tawada Yōko - to expose the wide-ranging treatment of personal experiences, and the intricate relations between the characters, the narrator, and the writing persona.

      In the context of world fiction and autobiography theories, the book investigates literary and linguistic challenges in expressing the “self.” The shishōsetsu are explored as stories of constructing identities between cultures, languages, literary canons, and testimonies of untranslatability of the self.



      Table of Contents
      Self and subjectivity in contemporary Japanese fiction – theories in autobiography (Paul Ricoeur, Philippe Lejeune, John Paul Eakin, Serge Doubrovsky) – world literature – comparative literature – cultural translation – cognitive functions of untranslatability – authorship in Japanese literature

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