0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments

Perversion and Modern Japan - Psychoanalysis, Literature, Culture (Paperback): Nina Cornyetz, J. Keith Vincent Perversion and Modern Japan - Psychoanalysis, Literature, Culture (Paperback)
Nina Cornyetz, J. Keith Vincent
R1,428 Discovery Miles 14 280 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

How did nerves and neuroses take the place of ghosts and spirits in Meiji Japan? How does Natsume Soseki's canonical novel Kokoro pervert the Freudian teleology of sexual development? What do we make of Jacques Lacan's infamous claim that because of the nature of their language the Japanese people were unanalyzable? And how are we to understand the re-awakening of collective memory occasioned by the sudden appearance of a Japanese Imperial soldier stumbling out of the jungle in Guam in 1972? In addressing these and other questions, the essays collected here theorize the relation of unconscious fantasy and perversion to discourses of nation, identity, and history in Japan. Against a tradition that claims that Freud's method, as a Western discourse, makes a bad 'fit'with Japan, this volume argues that psychoanalytic reading offers valuable insights into the ways in which 'Japan' itself continues to function as a psychic object. By reading a variety of cultural productions as symptomatic elaborations of unconscious and symbolic processes rather than as indexes to cultural truths, the authors combat the truisms of modernization theory and the seductive pull of culturalism. This volume also offers a much needed psychoanalytic alternative to the area studies convention that reads narratives of all sorts as "windows" offering insights into a fetishized Japanese culture. As such, it will be of huge interest to students and scholars of Japanese literature, history, culture, and psychoanalysis more generally.

Perversion and Modern Japan - Psychoanalysis, Literature, Culture (Hardcover): Nina Cornyetz, J. Keith Vincent Perversion and Modern Japan - Psychoanalysis, Literature, Culture (Hardcover)
Nina Cornyetz, J. Keith Vincent
R4,461 Discovery Miles 44 610 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

How did nerves and neuroses take the place of ghosts and spirits in Meiji Japan? How does Natsume Soseki's canonical novel Kokoro pervert the Freudian teleology of sexual development? What do we make of Jacques Lacan's infamous claim that because of the nature of their language the Japanese people were unanalyzable? And how are we to understand the re-awakening of collective memory occasioned by the sudden appearance of a Japanese Imperial soldier stumbling out of the jungle in Guam in 1972?

In addressing these and other questions, the essays collected here theorize the relation of unconscious fantasy and perversion to discourses of nation, identity, and history in Japan. Against a tradition that claims that Freud's method, as a Western discourse, makes a bad ?fit?with Japan, this volume argues that psychoanalytic reading offers valuable insights into the ways in which ?Japan? itself continues to function as a psychic object.

By reading a variety of cultural productions as symptomatic elaborations of unconscious and symbolic processes rather than as indexes to cultural truths, the authors combat the truisms of modernization theory and the seductive pull of culturalism. This volume also offers a much needed psychoanalytic alternative to the area studies convention that reads narratives of all sorts as "windows" offering insights into a fetishized Japanese culture. As such, it will be of huge interest to students and scholars of Japanese literature, history, culture, and psychoanalysis more generally.

Devils in Daylight (Paperback): Jun'ichiro Tanizaki Devils in Daylight (Paperback)
Jun'ichiro Tanizaki; Translated by J. Keith Vincent
R292 Discovery Miles 2 920 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

One morning, Takahashi, a writer who has just stayed up all night working, is interrupted by a phone call from his old friend Sonomura: barely able to contain his excitement, Sonomura claims that he has cracked a secret cryptographic code based on Edgar Allan Poe's The Gold-Bug and now knows exactly when and where a murder will take place-and they must hurry if they want to witness the murder, because it's later that very night! Sonomura has a history of lunacy and playing the amateur detective, so Takahashi is of course reluctant to believe him. Nevertheless, they stake out the secret location, and through tiny peepholes in the knotted wood, become voyeurs at the scene of a shocking crime... Atmospheric, erotic, and tense, Devils in Daylight is an early work by the master storyteller who "created a lifelong series of ingenious variations on a dominant theme: the power of love to energize and destroy" (Chicago Tribune).

Beautiful Fighting Girl (Paperback): Saito Tamaki Beautiful Fighting Girl (Paperback)
Saito Tamaki; Translated by J. Keith Vincent, Dawn Lawson; Hiroki Azuma
R523 R471 Discovery Miles 4 710 Save R52 (10%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

From "Cutie Honey" and "Sailor Moon" to "Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind," the worlds of Japanese anime and manga teem with prepubescent girls toting deadly weapons. Sometimes overtly sexual, always intensely cute, the beautiful fighting girl has been both hailed as a feminist icon and condemned as a symptom of the objectification of young women in Japanese society.
In "Beautiful Fighting Girl," Saito Tamaki offers a far more sophisticated and convincing interpretation of this alluring and capable figure. For Saito, the beautiful fighting girl is a complex sexual fantasy that paradoxically lends reality to the fictional spaces she inhabits. As an object of desire for male otaku (obsessive fans of anime and manga), she saturates these worlds with meaning even as her fictional status demands her ceaseless proliferation and reproduction. Rejecting simplistic moralizing, Saito understands the otaku's ability to eroticize and even fall in love with the beautiful fighting girl not as a sign of immaturity or maladaptation but as a result of a heightened sensitivity to the multiple layers of mediation and fictional context that constitute life in our hypermediated world--a logical outcome of the media they consume.
Featuring extensive interviews with Japanese and American otaku, a comprehensive genealogy of the beautiful fighting girl, and an analysis of the American outsider artist Henry Darger, whose baroque imagination Saito sees as an important antecedent of otaku culture, "Beautiful Fighting Girl" was hugely influential when first published in Japan, and it remains a key text in the study of manga, anime, and otaku culture. Now available in English for the first time, this book will spark new debates about the role played by desire in the production and consumption of popular culture.

Two-Timing Modernity - Homosocial Narrative in Modern Japanese Fiction (Hardcover): J. Keith Vincent Two-Timing Modernity - Homosocial Narrative in Modern Japanese Fiction (Hardcover)
J. Keith Vincent
R1,123 R975 Discovery Miles 9 750 Save R148 (13%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Until the late nineteenth century, Japan could boast of an elaborate cultural tradition surrounding the love and desire that men felt for other men. By the first years of the twentieth century, however, as heterosexuality became associated with an enlightened modernity, love between men was increasingly branded as "feudal" or immature. The resulting rupture in what has been called the "male homosocial continuum" constitutes one of the most significant markers of Japan's entrance into modernity. And yet, just as early Japanese modernity often seemed haunted by remnants of the premodern past, the nation's newly heteronormative culture was unable and perhaps unwilling to expunge completely the recent memory of a male homosocial past now read as perverse. Two-Timing Modernity integrates queer, feminist, and narratological approaches to show how key works by Japanese male authors-Mori Ogai, Natsume Soseki, Hamao Shiro, and Mishima Yukio-encompassed both a straight future and a queer past by employing new narrative techniques to stage tensions between two forms of temporality: the forward-looking time of modernization and normative development, and the "perverse" time of nostalgia, recursion, and repetition.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Bunty 380GSM Golf Towel (30x50cm)(3…
R300 R255 Discovery Miles 2 550
Bostik Double-Sided Tape (18mm x 10m…
 (1)
R31 Discovery Miles 310
Huntlea Original Memory Foam Mattress…
R957 Discovery Miles 9 570
Mellerware Swiss - Plastic Floor Fan…
R371 Discovery Miles 3 710
Swiss Miele Vacuum Bags (4 x Bags | 2 x…
 (8)
R199 R166 Discovery Miles 1 660
Marco Silicone Cellphone Card Holder…
R19 R10 Discovery Miles 100
Bantex @School Acrylic Paint - Yellow…
R21 Discovery Miles 210
Alva 5-Piece Roll-Up BBQ/ Braai Tool Set
R550 Discovery Miles 5 500
Elecstor GU-10 5W Rechargeable LED Bulb…
R69 R59 Discovery Miles 590
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the…
Megan Fox, Stephen Amell, … Blu-ray disc R48 Discovery Miles 480

 

Partners