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Uncovering Heian Japan - An Archaeology of Sensation and Inscription (Hardcover, New edition)
Loot Price: R568
Discovery Miles 5 680
You Save: R1,900
(77%)
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Uncovering Heian Japan - An Archaeology of Sensation and Inscription (Hardcover, New edition)
Series: Asia-Pacific: Culture, Politics, and Society
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List price R2,468
Loot Price R568
Discovery Miles 5 680
You Save R1,900 (77%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The poetry of the Heian court of Japan has typically been linked
with the emergence of a distinct Japanese language and culture.
This concept of a linguistically homogeneous and ethnically pure
"Japaneseness" has been integral to the construction of a modern
Japanese nation, especially during periods of western colonial
expansion and cultural encroachment. But Thomas LaMarre argues in
"Uncovering Heian Japan" that this need for a cultural unity--a
singular Japanese identity--has resulted in an overemphasis of a
relatively minor aspect of Heian poetry, obscuring not only its
other significant elements but also the porousness of Heian society
and the politics of poetic expression.
Combining a pathbreaking visual analysis of the calligraphy with
which this poetry was transcribed, a more traditional textual
analysis, and a review of the politics of the period, LaMarre
presents a dramatically new view of Heian poetry and culture. He
challenges the assumption of a cohesive "national imagination,"
seeing instead an early Japan that is ethnically diverse,
territorially porous, and indifferent to linguistic boundaries.
Working through the problems posed by institutionalized notions of
nationalism, nativism, and modernism, LaMarre rethinks the theories
of scholars such as Suzuki Hideo, Yoshimoto Takaaki, and Komatsu
Shigemi, in conjunction with theorists such as Derrida, Karatani,
Foucault, and Deleuze. Contesting the notion that speech is central
to the formation of community, "Uncovering Heian Japan" focuses
instead on the potential centrality of the more figural operations
of poetic practice.
Specialists in Japanese history and culture as well as scholars
working in other areas of cultural criticism will find that this
book enriches their understanding of an early Japan that has
exerted so much influence on later concepts of what it means to be
Japanese.
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