Truth from a Lie: Documentary, Detection, and Reflexivity in Abe Kobo's Realist Project: New Studies in Modern Japan
Autor Margaret Keyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 mai 2011
Undergirding his theory and practice of realism was a critique of conventional documentary and of the classic detective story. The texts examined here expose the degree to which the documentarian and the detective are active fabricators of meaning rather than neutral observers of fact. By paying close attention to the tension between the documentary and the fictive in Abe's works, Key draws out the ethical implications of his documentary approach, arguing persuasively that the documentary qualities of his writing, such as its valorization of objectivity over psychologism and the realm of "concrete things" over abstraction are strategies for challenging the dominant assumptions about what constitutes good ethics and good art, as well as the relationship between these two spheres. Truth from a Lie explores the ways in which Abe put documentary and the de
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780739138755
ISBN-10: 0739138758
Pagini: 197
Dimensiuni: 164 x 241 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria New Studies in Modern Japan
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0739138758
Pagini: 197
Dimensiuni: 164 x 241 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria New Studies in Modern Japan
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Chapter 1: Investigating the "Concrete Things" of Reality
Chapter 3 Chapter 2: Blurring the Boundary between the Fictional and the Real: Ishi no me and "Jiken no haikei"
Chapter 4 Chapter 3: True Lies and Dramatized Facts: Mokugekisha andMihitsu no koi
Chapter 5 Chapter 4: Memoir, Murder, and the Metafictional Aesthetic in Tanin no kao
Chapter 6 Chapter 5: Rethinking Abe: Objectivity as Epistemology, Ethics,and Art
Chapter 2 Chapter 1: Investigating the "Concrete Things" of Reality
Chapter 3 Chapter 2: Blurring the Boundary between the Fictional and the Real: Ishi no me and "Jiken no haikei"
Chapter 4 Chapter 3: True Lies and Dramatized Facts: Mokugekisha andMihitsu no koi
Chapter 5 Chapter 4: Memoir, Murder, and the Metafictional Aesthetic in Tanin no kao
Chapter 6 Chapter 5: Rethinking Abe: Objectivity as Epistemology, Ethics,and Art
Recenzii
Abe Kobo's writings are as fresh and relevant today as they were when he wrote them between 1948 and 1991. Margaret Key's analysis of them is a joy to read. Abe has been best known as a novelist of the absurd, but Key utilizes newspaper reportage and plays to read him in a new light. In a tight argument rendered in supple and sure prose, Key deftly locates Abe within Japanese intellectual history and restores to his work the ethical realist dimension it so rightly deserves.
Dr. Key's study takes the unconventional view of focusing on the realisms in Abe's texts and through it sheds light on an aspect of his oeuvre, and of postwar Japanese literature in general, that has been too long neglected. Examining the ties between documentary movement and its offshoots to changing perceptions of political consciousness, Dr. Key sheds light on the complex interplay of politics, philosophy, and literary representation in this unique period of modern Japanese history.
Truth from a Lie: Documentary, Detection, and Reflexivity in Abe Kobo's Realist Projectis an illuminating book that complements the existing English-based scholarship on Abe.
Margaret Key is to be congratulated for writing an extremely intelligent book, one that is thoroughly researched and endowed with an understanding of Abe Kobo that is both broad (in the sense of the scale of information provided) and deep (in the sense of theoretical acuity).Japanese literary scholarship in the United States frequently suffers from an imbalance in offering up great reams of empirical data that are held together by frameworks and methodological assumptions that remain disproportionately slight and underexamined. Key's work is quite unusual in this regard, and it is clear that she attains this depth by thinking not only of Abe but of literature in general.
Dr. Key's study takes the unconventional view of focusing on the realisms in Abe's texts and through it sheds light on an aspect of his oeuvre, and of postwar Japanese literature in general, that has been too long neglected. Examining the ties between documentary movement and its offshoots to changing perceptions of political consciousness, Dr. Key sheds light on the complex interplay of politics, philosophy, and literary representation in this unique period of modern Japanese history.
Truth from a Lie: Documentary, Detection, and Reflexivity in Abe Kobo's Realist Projectis an illuminating book that complements the existing English-based scholarship on Abe.
Margaret Key is to be congratulated for writing an extremely intelligent book, one that is thoroughly researched and endowed with an understanding of Abe Kobo that is both broad (in the sense of the scale of information provided) and deep (in the sense of theoretical acuity).Japanese literary scholarship in the United States frequently suffers from an imbalance in offering up great reams of empirical data that are held together by frameworks and methodological assumptions that remain disproportionately slight and underexamined. Key's work is quite unusual in this regard, and it is clear that she attains this depth by thinking not only of Abe but of literature in general.