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Through careful analysis of literary texts and attention to writers and works long excluded from Japan's postwar literary canon, this book introduces fresh perspectives on the occupation era.
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Through careful analysis of literary texts and attention to writers and works long excluded from Japan's postwar literary canon, this book introduces fresh perspectives on the occupation era.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. September 1999
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 155mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 617g
- ISBN-13: 9780415191944
- ISBN-10: 0415191947
- Artikelnr.: 21206966
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. September 1999
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 155mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 617g
- ISBN-13: 9780415191944
- ISBN-10: 0415191947
- Artikelnr.: 21206966
Molasky, Michael S.
Preface. Introduction: Burned-Out Ruins and Barbed-Wire Fences. The
Occupation of Japan as History. The Occupation in Mainland Japanese
Literature and Criticism. Okinawa: From Premodern Kingdom to Japanese
Prefecture. The Battle of Okinawa and the American Occupation (1945-1972).
Chapter Summaries. Notes Chapter One: Roads to No-Man's Land.
Language,Landscape and Gender in The American School. Gender, History and
the Construction of Victimhood in The Cocktail Party. Fact and Fiction.
Notes Chapter Two: A Base Town In The Literary Imagination. An Okinawan
Boy. The Town That Went Pale. Children of Mixed Blood and the Remaking of
Koza. Notes Chapter Three: A Darker Shade of Difference. Representing
Blacks in Postwar Japan. Race and Narrative Ambivalance in Prize Stock.
Reporting Truth, Imagining Motives: Painting on Black Canvas. Poetry of
Protest: Arakawa Akira's The Coloured Race. Notes Chapter Four: Female
Floodwalls. The Recreation and Amusement Association. Prostitution After
the RAA. Prostitution and the Japanese Publishing Industry. The Chastity of
Japan. Female Floodwall. Notes Chapter Five: Ambivalent Allegories. The
Generational Logic of Guests From Afar. Prostitution and Other Honest Jobs:
The Only Ones. Caste and Outcasts: Women of a Base Town. Marriage, Money
and Desire: The Women of Chitose, Hokkaido. Notes Chapter Six: The Occupier
Within. Reproducing The Occupation: Human Sheep. Style as Story: Narrative
Technique and Memory in American Hijiki. Notes Epilogue: Occupation
Literature in the Post-Vietnam Era. Okinawan Literature Since the Vietnam
War. Saegusa Kazuko's A Winter's Death. Notes.
Occupation of Japan as History. The Occupation in Mainland Japanese
Literature and Criticism. Okinawa: From Premodern Kingdom to Japanese
Prefecture. The Battle of Okinawa and the American Occupation (1945-1972).
Chapter Summaries. Notes Chapter One: Roads to No-Man's Land.
Language,Landscape and Gender in The American School. Gender, History and
the Construction of Victimhood in The Cocktail Party. Fact and Fiction.
Notes Chapter Two: A Base Town In The Literary Imagination. An Okinawan
Boy. The Town That Went Pale. Children of Mixed Blood and the Remaking of
Koza. Notes Chapter Three: A Darker Shade of Difference. Representing
Blacks in Postwar Japan. Race and Narrative Ambivalance in Prize Stock.
Reporting Truth, Imagining Motives: Painting on Black Canvas. Poetry of
Protest: Arakawa Akira's The Coloured Race. Notes Chapter Four: Female
Floodwalls. The Recreation and Amusement Association. Prostitution After
the RAA. Prostitution and the Japanese Publishing Industry. The Chastity of
Japan. Female Floodwall. Notes Chapter Five: Ambivalent Allegories. The
Generational Logic of Guests From Afar. Prostitution and Other Honest Jobs:
The Only Ones. Caste and Outcasts: Women of a Base Town. Marriage, Money
and Desire: The Women of Chitose, Hokkaido. Notes Chapter Six: The Occupier
Within. Reproducing The Occupation: Human Sheep. Style as Story: Narrative
Technique and Memory in American Hijiki. Notes Epilogue: Occupation
Literature in the Post-Vietnam Era. Okinawan Literature Since the Vietnam
War. Saegusa Kazuko's A Winter's Death. Notes.
Preface. Introduction: Burned-Out Ruins and Barbed-Wire Fences. The
Occupation of Japan as History. The Occupation in Mainland Japanese
Literature and Criticism. Okinawa: From Premodern Kingdom to Japanese
Prefecture. The Battle of Okinawa and the American Occupation (1945-1972).
Chapter Summaries. Notes Chapter One: Roads to No-Man's Land.
Language,Landscape and Gender in The American School. Gender, History and
the Construction of Victimhood in The Cocktail Party. Fact and Fiction.
Notes Chapter Two: A Base Town In The Literary Imagination. An Okinawan
Boy. The Town That Went Pale. Children of Mixed Blood and the Remaking of
Koza. Notes Chapter Three: A Darker Shade of Difference. Representing
Blacks in Postwar Japan. Race and Narrative Ambivalance in Prize Stock.
Reporting Truth, Imagining Motives: Painting on Black Canvas. Poetry of
Protest: Arakawa Akira's The Coloured Race. Notes Chapter Four: Female
Floodwalls. The Recreation and Amusement Association. Prostitution After
the RAA. Prostitution and the Japanese Publishing Industry. The Chastity of
Japan. Female Floodwall. Notes Chapter Five: Ambivalent Allegories. The
Generational Logic of Guests From Afar. Prostitution and Other Honest Jobs:
The Only Ones. Caste and Outcasts: Women of a Base Town. Marriage, Money
and Desire: The Women of Chitose, Hokkaido. Notes Chapter Six: The Occupier
Within. Reproducing The Occupation: Human Sheep. Style as Story: Narrative
Technique and Memory in American Hijiki. Notes Epilogue: Occupation
Literature in the Post-Vietnam Era. Okinawan Literature Since the Vietnam
War. Saegusa Kazuko's A Winter's Death. Notes.
Occupation of Japan as History. The Occupation in Mainland Japanese
Literature and Criticism. Okinawa: From Premodern Kingdom to Japanese
Prefecture. The Battle of Okinawa and the American Occupation (1945-1972).
Chapter Summaries. Notes Chapter One: Roads to No-Man's Land.
Language,Landscape and Gender in The American School. Gender, History and
the Construction of Victimhood in The Cocktail Party. Fact and Fiction.
Notes Chapter Two: A Base Town In The Literary Imagination. An Okinawan
Boy. The Town That Went Pale. Children of Mixed Blood and the Remaking of
Koza. Notes Chapter Three: A Darker Shade of Difference. Representing
Blacks in Postwar Japan. Race and Narrative Ambivalance in Prize Stock.
Reporting Truth, Imagining Motives: Painting on Black Canvas. Poetry of
Protest: Arakawa Akira's The Coloured Race. Notes Chapter Four: Female
Floodwalls. The Recreation and Amusement Association. Prostitution After
the RAA. Prostitution and the Japanese Publishing Industry. The Chastity of
Japan. Female Floodwall. Notes Chapter Five: Ambivalent Allegories. The
Generational Logic of Guests From Afar. Prostitution and Other Honest Jobs:
The Only Ones. Caste and Outcasts: Women of a Base Town. Marriage, Money
and Desire: The Women of Chitose, Hokkaido. Notes Chapter Six: The Occupier
Within. Reproducing The Occupation: Human Sheep. Style as Story: Narrative
Technique and Memory in American Hijiki. Notes Epilogue: Occupation
Literature in the Post-Vietnam Era. Okinawan Literature Since the Vietnam
War. Saegusa Kazuko's A Winter's Death. Notes.