Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the theme of dystopia and trauma, works of literary criticism are still a few. This article aims to turn scholars’ attention to the relevance of a critic analysis of Fukushima literary response starting from the production of Wagō Ryōichi and his poetical tweets. The purpose is to suggest new study guidelines concerning the literature of the catastrophe as a genre itself, thorough the investigation of the use of words as a vehicle of memory and by extension, the social role of literature towards catastrophe. Wagō’s works also offer the chance to investigate the relationship between literature and social networks, in so far as the success of Wagō’s net-poetry raises conc...
Atomic metaphors permeated daily life as the world reacted to the atomic bombings of Japan and the n...
This article explores the many ways in which Michaël Ferrier, novelist, academic, and essayist, wri...
AbstractLiterature has often been turned to during global chaos of world wars, terrorism, and unprec...
Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the theme of dystopia and tr...
Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the study of dystopia and tr...
Wagō Ryōichi is a Japanese poet who met with success after publishing his poetical works on Twitter:...
The literary responses to Fukushima disaster appeared in the last few years highlighted the similari...
Every disaster outbreak in human history has either implicitly or explicitly promoted literary creat...
On 11th March 2011 at 2:46 PM the Japanese writer Tawada Yōko was in Berlin, miles away from her Jap...
This dissertation takes up the question of how authors, artists, filmmakers and others attempted to ...
The impact of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan on the 11th of March (3.11) exte...
Textual agency plays a fundamental role with regard to the literary production devoted to catastroph...
This paper analyses hibakusha (atomic bomb survivor) poetry as examples of the nuclear sublime, whic...
Two years after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami or 3.11 as it is more commonly known, Japanes...
Atomic metaphors permeated daily life as the world reacted to the atomic bombings of Japan and the n...
This article explores the many ways in which Michaël Ferrier, novelist, academic, and essayist, wri...
AbstractLiterature has often been turned to during global chaos of world wars, terrorism, and unprec...
Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the theme of dystopia and tr...
Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the study of dystopia and tr...
Wagō Ryōichi is a Japanese poet who met with success after publishing his poetical works on Twitter:...
The literary responses to Fukushima disaster appeared in the last few years highlighted the similari...
Every disaster outbreak in human history has either implicitly or explicitly promoted literary creat...
On 11th March 2011 at 2:46 PM the Japanese writer Tawada Yōko was in Berlin, miles away from her Jap...
This dissertation takes up the question of how authors, artists, filmmakers and others attempted to ...
The impact of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan on the 11th of March (3.11) exte...
Textual agency plays a fundamental role with regard to the literary production devoted to catastroph...
This paper analyses hibakusha (atomic bomb survivor) poetry as examples of the nuclear sublime, whic...
Two years after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami or 3.11 as it is more commonly known, Japanes...
Atomic metaphors permeated daily life as the world reacted to the atomic bombings of Japan and the n...
This article explores the many ways in which Michaël Ferrier, novelist, academic, and essayist, wri...
AbstractLiterature has often been turned to during global chaos of world wars, terrorism, and unprec...