Literature after Fukushima examines how aesthetic representation contributes to a critical understanding of the 3.11 triple disaster â the Great East Japan earthquake, tsunami, and multiple meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.
Literature after Fukushima examines how aesthetic representation contributes to a critical understanding of the 3.11 triple disaster â the Great East Japan earthquake, tsunami, and multiple meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Linda Flores is an Associate Professor in Modern Japanese Literature in the Faculty of Oriental Studies at the University of Oxford and the Fellow in Japanese Studies at Pembroke College, Oxford, UK. Barbara Geilhorn is a Principal Researcher at the German Institute for Japanese Studies Tokyo (DIJ) and an Adjunct Researcher at the Tsubouchi Memorial Theatre Museum, Waseda University, Japan.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Part 1: Marginalized Voices 1. Real Eyes Realize Real Lies: Writing 'Fukushima' through the Child's Gaze 2. Animal Stories: Agency after Radiation 3. Voice and Voicelessness: Reading Vernaculars in Post-3.11 Literature Part 2: Spatial Acts 4. From That Day Forward: T hoku, 3.11, and 'Memory Landscapes' 5. The Nuclear Home and the Alien Village: The Production of Post-3.11 Space in Sakate Y ji's Lone War 6. Between Trauma Processing, Emotional Healing, and Nuclear Criticism- Documentary Theater Responding to the Fukushima Disaster Part 3: Border-Crossing 7. Lost in Narration in Tawada Y ko's The Emissary 8. Spoiled Meals: Immunitary and Metabolic Imaginaries in Kawakami Mieko's 'Dreams of Love, Etc.' and Murata Sayaka's Convenience Store Woman Part 4: Nuclear Futurity 9. Humanism and the Hikari-Event: Reading e with Stengers in Catastrophic Times 10. Afterword: Chernobyl's Past and Fukushima's Remembered Future
Introduction Part 1: Marginalized Voices 1. Real Eyes Realize Real Lies: Writing 'Fukushima' through the Child's Gaze 2. Animal Stories: Agency after Radiation 3. Voice and Voicelessness: Reading Vernaculars in Post-3.11 Literature Part 2: Spatial Acts 4. From That Day Forward: T hoku, 3.11, and 'Memory Landscapes' 5. The Nuclear Home and the Alien Village: The Production of Post-3.11 Space in Sakate Y ji's Lone War 6. Between Trauma Processing, Emotional Healing, and Nuclear Criticism- Documentary Theater Responding to the Fukushima Disaster Part 3: Border-Crossing 7. Lost in Narration in Tawada Y ko's The Emissary 8. Spoiled Meals: Immunitary and Metabolic Imaginaries in Kawakami Mieko's 'Dreams of Love, Etc.' and Murata Sayaka's Convenience Store Woman Part 4: Nuclear Futurity 9. Humanism and the Hikari-Event: Reading e with Stengers in Catastrophic Times 10. Afterword: Chernobyl's Past and Fukushima's Remembered Future
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