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Sakaguchi Ango (1906-1955) was a writer who thrived on iconoclasm
and agitation. He remains one of the most creative and stimulating
thinkers of twentieth-century Japan. Ango was catapulted into the
public consciousness in the months immediately following Japan's
surrender to the Allied Forces in 1945. The energy and iconoclasm
of his writings were matched by the outrageous and outsized antics
of his life. Behind that life, and in the midst of those tumultuous
times, Ango spoke with a cutting clarity. The essays and
translations included in Literary Mischief probe some of the most
volatile issues of culture, ideology, and philosophy of postwar
Japan. Represented among the essayists are some of Japan's most
important contemporary critics (e.g., Karatani K?jin and Ogino
Anna). Many of Ango's works were produced during Japan's wars in
China and the Pacific, a context in which words and ideas carried
dire consequences for both writers and readers. All of the
contributions to this volume consider this dimension of Ango's
legacy, and it forms one of the thematic threads tying the volume
together. The essays use Ango's writings to situate his
accomplishment and contribute to our understanding of the
potentials and limitations of radical thought in times of cultural
nationalism, war, violence, and repression. This collection of
essays and translations takes advantage of current interest in
Sakaguchi Ango's work and makes available to the English-reading
audience translations and critical work heretofore unavailable. As
a result, the reader will come away with a coherent sense of Ango
the individual and the writer, a critical apparatus for evaluating
Ango, and access to new translations of key texts.
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