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Book Cover
E-book
Author Kono, Kimberly Tae.

Title Romance, family, and nation in Japanese colonial literature / Kimberly T. Kono
Edition 1st ed
Published New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2010

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Description 1 online resource (x, 214 pages)
Contents Performing Ethnicity, Gender, and Modern Love in Yokota Fumiko's "Love Letter" -- (Re)Writing Colonial Lineage in Sakaguchi Reiko's "Passionflower" -- Looking for Legitimacy: Cultural Identity and the Interethnic Family in Colonial Korea -- Marriage, Modernization, and the Imperial Subject -- Colonizing a National Literature: The Debates on Manchurian Literature
Summary Romance, Family, and Nation in Japanese Colonial Literature explores how Japanese writers in Korea, Manchuria, and Taiwan used narratives of romantic and familial love in order to traverse the dangerous currents of empire. Focusing on the period between 1937 and 1945, this study discusses how literary renderings of interethnic relations reflect the numerous ways that Japan's imperial expansion was imagined: as an unrequited romance, a reunion of long-separated families, an oppressive endeavor, and a utopian collaboration. The manifestations of romance, marriage, and family in colonial literature foreground how writers positioned themselves vis-̉-vis empire and reveal the different conditions, consequences, and constraints that they faced in rendering Japanese colonialism
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Japanese literature -- Meiji period, 1868-1912 -- History and criticism
Japanese literature -- East Asia -- History and criticism -- Juvenile literature
Marriage in literature.
Literary studies: general -- Japanese -- Japan.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Asian -- General.
Literature.
Japanese literature
Japanese literature -- Meiji period
Marriage in literature
East Asia
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Juvenile works
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780230105782
0230105785
9781349382453
1349382450