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Constructing Subjectivities: Autobiographies in Modern Japan

Autor Noboru Tomonari
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 28 feb 2008
Constructing Subjectivities addresses the relationship between memory and modernity and its relevance to Japanese autobiographical texts. Tomonari construes autobiographies as embodying memory in modernity, and regards the conditions of modernity as having determined, in part, the shape of autobiographical texts. At the same time, however, he argues that Japanese autobiographies were not simply bound to the cultural and social norms of the time, but rather that the texts themselves were among the main agents of fostering Japanese modernity. The autobiographies he discusses served to initiate certain societal transitions and took part in the remaking of social norms and conventions.

According to Constructing Subjectivities, mnemonic texts were crucial to the construction of modern ideological discourses such as those on the self, the family, entrepreneurship, the roles of women, and the nation. The study of this discursive process enables us to understand how the Japanese themselves tried to control the form of modernity that materialized in Japan. Because autobiography constructed and embodied collective memory at this time, analyzing the discursive process is also crucial to understanding both contemporary Japan and the self-perception of the Japanese people.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780739117163
ISBN-10: 0739117165
Pagini: 215
Dimensiuni: 161 x 238 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Part 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part I: Autobiographical Reflections in the Late Tokugawa Period: Lives in Commerce
Chapter 3 Suzuki Bokushi: The Shared Virtue
Chapter 4 Virtue as an Ideology
Chapter 5 Moral Responsibility
Chapter 6 Memory as Resource
Chapter 7 Trading on One's Own
Chapter 8 The Joys of an Entrepreneur
Chapter 9 Initial Disappointment: Virtue Discounted
Chapter 10 Outside Yet Inside
Chapter 11 The Consolation of Memory
Chapter 12 Autobiographies in Between
Part 13 Part II: Creating Modern Managers: The Uses of Memory by Fukuzawa Yukichi and Shibusawa Eiichi
Chapter 14 Management Intellectuals, Economy, and Autobiography
Chapter 15 Sharing Memory
Chapter 16 Better than the Bureaucrats
Chapter 17 The New Business Elite
Chapter 18 Overcoming Seisho (Government Protégés)
Chapter 19 A Choice of One's Own
Chapter 20 Getting Ahead in the Meiji Period: Later Autobiographies by Shibusawa
Chapter 21 The Entrepreneurial Self
Chapter 22 Improving Commercial Education
Chapter 23 Creating and Nurturing Managers
Chapter 24 Worker Contentions
Chapter 25 Social Marginality and the Meiji Entrepreneur Autobiographies
Part 26 Self-Narration as Propaganda: Autobiographies by Anarchists and Socialists in the 1920s
Chapter 27 Leaning toward the Left
Chapter 28 The Conversion of a Rebel
Chapter 29 Self-Transformation through Activism
Chapter 30 Memory Evoked by Memory
Chapter 31 The Final Days of the Capitalist Class
Chapter 32 Depicting the Upper Middle Class
Chapter 33 Changes in the Socialist Movement
Chapter 34 Katayama Sen's Path to Socialism
Chapter 35 Katayam as the Peasant/Proletariat
Chapter 36 The Emergence of the Proletariat
Chapter 37 Autobiographies of Counterhegemony
Part 38 Part IV: Working Mothers: Autobiographies by Japanese Women in the 1950s
Chapter 39 Being a Wife and a Mother
Chapter 40 Departing from a Mother's Way
Chapter 41 Yamakawa Kikue as Wife and Mother
Chapter 42 Ishigaki Ayako's Search for Memory
Chapter 43 Positioning Women as Mothers
Chapter 44 Balancing Work and Child Care
Chapter 45 An Accidental Career Woman
Chapter 46 Self-Development through Work
Chapter 47 An Activist with a Child
Chapter 48 Career over Housework?
Chapter 49 Part-Time Women and the Gendered Division of Labor
Chapter 50 Working Mothers and Autobiography
Part 51 Conclusion
Part 52 Works Cited

Recenzii

Constructing Subjectivities is an intriguing account of autobiographical writing in Japan placed in a socioeconomic context. Autobiographies by mainstream figures from the business community such as Suzuki Bokushi, Kawato Jindai, and Fukuzawa Yûkichi are joined by those from radical social activists like Sakai Toshihiko, Ôsugi Sakae, and Katayama Sen, not to mention ones by activist women such as Yamakawa Kikue, Ishigaki Ayako, Oku Mumeo, Kamichika Ichiko and Maruoka Hideko. The author thus offers the reader a diverse and wide-ranging assortment of autobiographical texts for discussion and analysis.
This book is an intriguing study with outstanding strengths, particularly in regard to the wealth of material presented...anyone interested in modern Japanese culture and society will come away from it with new insight. It raises the question of how Japanese business has contributed to Japanese culture. It has the potential to trigger future research on self-narratives in a transnational context, and it also inspires reflections on the relationship between "reality" and discursive as well as literary writing.