明治文学における男同士の性愛の表現<br>In the Company of Men : Representations of Male-Male Sexuality in Meiji Literature

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明治文学における男同士の性愛の表現
In the Company of Men : Representations of Male-Male Sexuality in Meiji Literature

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 296 p./サイズ 10 illus.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780804752145
  • DDC分類 895.609353

基本説明

"Jim Reichert has written an authoritative and always gripping account of a key moment of transition in Japanese literature and culture. With subtlety and clarity he shows us how the forced Westernization of Japan in the late 19th century led to the criminalization of homosexual behavior and the abrupt decline of homosexual love as a literary subject." ---Edmund White, Princeton University.

Full Description

In the Company of Men examines representations of male-male sexuality in literature from the Meiji period (1868-1912), the era when Japan embarked on an unprecedented modernization campaign. Because male-male sexuality occupied a prominent place in the literary culture of the preceding Edo period (1600-1868), the issue was of importance to Meiji writers and intellectuals, especially given the stigma attached to male-male sexuality in Europe and America, the "civilized" societies that Japan strove to emulate as it modernized. The heterosexualization of literature thus emerged as a key component of the production of Japanese literary and cultural modernity. At the same time, male-male sexuality also surfaced as an important cultural symbol for segments of society opposed to the push to modernize. In the Company of Men considers how these conflicting attitudes toward male-male sexuality manifested themselves in Meiji literary history.

Contents

Contents List of Figures 000 Note on Japanese Names and Terms 000 Introduction 000 Part I: Nanshoku and Early-Meiji Modernity 000 1. Shizu no odamaki and Early-Meiji Nostalgia for Samurai Nanshoku 000 2. Sawamura Tanosuke and Early-Meiji Reinterpretations of Kabuki Nanshoku 000 Part II: Nanshoku and Literary Reform 000 3. Tosei shosei katagi and the Institutionalization of Compulsory Male Heterosexuality 000 4. Yamada Bimyo: Historical Fiction and Modern Love 000 Part III: Nanshoku and Meiji Neoclassicism 000 5. Samurai Love and Mid-Meiji Masculinity in Koda Rohan's Hige otoko 000 Part IV: Nanshoku and the Late-Meiji Novel 000 6. The Love That Dare Not Speak Its Name: Male-Male Desire in Natsume Soseki's Nowaki 000 7. Nanshoku and Naturalism in Mori Ogai's Vita Sexualis 000 Conclusion 000 Notes 000 Index 000

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