A Fictional Commons: Natsume Soseki and the Properties of Modern Literature

A Fictional Commons: Natsume Soseki and the Properties of Modern Literature

by Michael K. Bourdaghs
A Fictional Commons: Natsume Soseki and the Properties of Modern Literature

A Fictional Commons: Natsume Soseki and the Properties of Modern Literature

by Michael K. Bourdaghs

eBook

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Overview

Modernity arrived in Japan, as elsewhere, through new forms of ownership. In A Fictional Commons, Michael K. Bourdaghs explores how the literary and theoretical works of Natsume Sōseki (1867–1916), widely celebrated as Japan's greatest modern novelist, exploited the contradictions and ambiguities that haunted this new system. Many of his works feature narratives about inheritance, thievery, and the struggle to obtain or preserve material wealth while also imagining alternative ways of owning and sharing. For Sōseki, literature was a means for thinking through—and beyond—private property. Bourdaghs puts Sōseki into dialogue with thinkers from his own era (including William James and Mizuno Rentarō, author of Japan’s first copyright law) and discusses how his work anticipates such theorists as Karatani Kōjin and Franco Moretti. As Bourdaghs shows, Sōseki both appropriated and rejected concepts of ownership and subjectivity in ways that theorized literature as a critical response to the emergence of global capitalism.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781478021926
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 08/09/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 11 MB
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About the Author

Michael K. Bourdaghs is Robert S. Ingersoll Professor of East Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago, coeditor of Sound Alignments: Popular Music in Asia's Cold Wars, also published by Duke University Press, and author of Sayonara Amerika, Sayonara Nippon: A Geopolitical Prehistory of J-Pop.

Table of Contents

Note on Usage  ix
Acknowledgments  xi
Introduction. Owning up to Sōseki  1
1. Fables of Property: Nameless Cats, Trickster Badgers, Stray Sheep  13
2. House under a Shadow: Disowning the Psychology of Possessive Individualism in The Gate  51
3. Property and Sociological Knowledge: Sōseki and the Gift of Narrative  91
4. The Tragedy of the Market:Younger Brothers, Women, and Colonial Subjects in Kokoro  121
Conclusion. Who Owns Sōseki? Or, How Not to Belong in World Literature  147
Notes  177
Bibliography  205
Index  219
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