Writing the love of boys : origins of bishōnen culture in modernist Japanese literature

Bibliographic Information

Writing the love of boys : origins of bishōnen culture in modernist Japanese literature

Jeffrey Angles

University of Minnesota Press, c2011

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

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Note

Bibliography: p. 273-290

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Despite its centuries-long tradition of literary and artistic depictions of love between men, around the fin de siecle Japanese culture began to portray same-sex desire as immoral. Writing the Love of Boys looks at the response to this mindset during the critical era of cultural ferment between the two world wars as a number of Japanese writers challenged the idea of love and desire between men as pathological. Jeffrey Angles focuses on key writers, examining how they experimented with new language, genres, and ideas to find fresh ways to represent love and desire between men. He traces the personal and literary relationships between contemporaries such as the poet Murayama Kaita, the mystery writers Edogawa Ranpo and Hamao Shiro, the anthropologist Iwata Jun'ichi, and the avant-garde innovator Inagaki Taruho. Writing the Love of Boys shows how these authors interjected the subject of male-male desire into discussions of modern art, aesthetics, and perversity. It also explores the impact of their efforts on contemporary Japanese culture, including the development of the tropes of male homoeroticism that recur so often in Japanese girls' manga about bishonen love.

Table of Contents

Note about Japanese Names Introduction 1. Blow the Blood-Stained Bugle: Murayama Kaita and the Language of Personal Sensation 2. Treading the Edges of the Known World: Homoerotic Fantasies in Murayama Kaita's Prose 3. The Appeal of the Strange: Same-Sex Desire in Edogawa Ranpo's Mystery Fiction 4. (Re)Discovering Same-Sex Love: Ranpo and the Creation of Queer History 5. Uninscribing the Adolescent Body: Aesthetic Resistance in Taruho's Writing Conclusion: Postwar Legacies Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index

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