Imperial Literature: Languages, Bodies, and Others in the Japanese Empire

  • Ishida, Mari
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Publication date
January 2016
Publisher
eScholarship, University of California

Abstract

This dissertation examines the conflicting roles of literature in the production of discursive spaces of the Japanese empire from the 1920s to the early 1940s, with a focus on the relationship between linguistic imperialism, mechanisms of colonial violence, and multi-voiced and hybridized colonial spaces. I have constructed the category of Japanese imperial literature as “literature in between,” which stands between Japanese literature (nihon bungaku, national literature) and Japanese-language literature (nihongo bungaku, Japanophone-literature), in order to shed light on the role of ambivalent and precarious colonial others as the driving force of the expansion of the Japanese empire. Japanese imperial literature emerges as the site that r...

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