Disruptions of daily life : Japanese literary modernism in the world

Author(s)

    • Mitchell, Arthur M.

Bibliographic Information

Disruptions of daily life : Japanese literary modernism in the world

Arthur M. Mitchell

(Studies of the East Asian Institute)(Cornell East Asia series, no. 202)

Cornell University Press, 2020

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 249-252) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Disruptions of Daily Life explores the mass media landscape of early twentieth century in order to uncover the subversive societal impact of four major Japanese authors: Tanizaki Jun'ichiro, Yokomitsu Riichi, Kawabata Yasunari, and Hirabayashi Taiko. Arthur Mitchell examines this literature against global realities through a modernist lens, studying an alternative modernism that challenges the Western European model. Through broad surveys of discussions surrounding Japanese life in the 1920s, Mitchell locates and examines flourishing divergent ideologies of the early twentieth century such as gender, ethnicity, and nationalism. He unravels how the narrative and linguistic strategies of modernist texts interrogated the innocence of this language, disrupting their hold on people's imagined relationship to daily life. These modernist works often discursively displaced the authority of their own claims by inadvertently exposing the global epistemology of East vs. West. Mitchell's reading of these formalist texts expands modernism studies into a more translational dialogue by locating subversions within the local historical culture and allowing readers to make connections to the time and place in which the texts were written. In highlighting the unbreakable link between literature and society, Disruptions of Daily Life reaffirms the value of modernist fiction and its ability to make us aware of how realities are constructed-and how those realities can be changed.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Shattering the Status Quo: Reading Modernism in the Early Twentieth Century 1. Fetishism of the West in Tanizaki Jun'ichiro's A Fool's Love 2. Subversions of Ethnicity in Yokomitsu Riichi's Neo-Sensationist Writings 3. Kawabata Yasunari's The Scarlet Gang of Asakusaand the Narrative of the Present 4. "Love" and (Male) Subjectivity in Hirabayashi Taiko's "In the Charity Ward" Coda: Against the National Literary Narrative

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