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"The publication of these translations may well be remembered as an epoch-making event. Mark Driscoll has made a major contribution to our understanding of Japanese modernity in all of its complexity, of postcoloniality as a theoretical concept and political praxis, and of the politics of Asian studies as a discipline. Moreover, he has rescued a nearly forgotten figure whose work speaks a message that--as Driscoll demonstrates so lucidly--needs to be heard by English-speaking readers today."--Michael K. Bourdaghs, author of "The Dawn that Never Comes: Shimazaki Toson and Japanese Nationalism"

Produktbeschreibung
"The publication of these translations may well be remembered as an epoch-making event. Mark Driscoll has made a major contribution to our understanding of Japanese modernity in all of its complexity, of postcoloniality as a theoretical concept and political praxis, and of the politics of Asian studies as a discipline. Moreover, he has rescued a nearly forgotten figure whose work speaks a message that--as Driscoll demonstrates so lucidly--needs to be heard by English-speaking readers today."--Michael K. Bourdaghs, author of "The Dawn that Never Comes: Shimazaki Toson and Japanese Nationalism"
Autorenporträt
Yuasa Katsuei (1910–1972) was the author of more than twenty novellas and novels and many essays and travel accounts. Mark Driscoll is Assistant Professor of Japanese and International Studies at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He is a coeditor of Prosthetic Territories: Politics and Hypertechnologies.