Two-Timing Modernity: Homosocial Narrative in Modern Japanese Fiction

Two-Timing Modernity: Homosocial Narrative in Modern Japanese Fiction

by J. Keith Vincent
Two-Timing Modernity: Homosocial Narrative in Modern Japanese Fiction

Two-Timing Modernity: Homosocial Narrative in Modern Japanese Fiction

by J. Keith Vincent

Hardcover

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Overview

Until the late nineteenth century, Japan could boast of an elaborate cultural tradition surrounding the love and desire that men felt for other men. By the first years of the twentieth century, however, as heterosexuality became associated with an enlightened modernity, love between men was increasingly branded as “feudal” or immature. The resulting rupture in what has been called the “male homosocial continuum” constitutes one of the most significant markers of Japan’s entrance into modernity. And yet, just as early Japanese modernity often seemed haunted by remnants of the premodern past, the nation’s newly heteronormative culture was unable and perhaps unwilling to expunge completely the recent memory of a male homosocial past now read as perverse.

Two-Timing Modernity integrates queer, feminist, and narratological approaches to show how key works by Japanese male authors—Mori Ōgai, Natsume Sōseki, Hamao Shirō, and Mishima Yukio—encompassed both a straight future and a queer past by employing new narrative techniques to stage tensions between two forms of temporality: the forward-looking time of modernization and normative development, and the “perverse” time of nostalgia, recursion, and repetition.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674067127
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 11/19/2012
Series: Harvard East Asian Monographs , #352
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 9.00(w) x 6.20(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

J. Keith Vincent is Assistant Professor of Japanese and Comparative Literature at Boston University.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Remembering the Homosocial Continuum 1

1 Toward a Definition of Homosocial Narrative 24

2 Between the First and the Third Person in Mori Ogai's The Wild Goose 43

3 The Uncut Gem: Stereoscopic Homosociality in The Wild Goose 63

4 Sensei's Bloody Legacy: Soseki's Kokoro in the Male Homosocial Imagination 86

5 Kokoro and the Primal Scene of Modem Japanese Homosociality 120

6 Gothic Homosociality in The Devil's Disciple 152

7 The Still Birth of Gay Identity in Mishima Yukio's Confessions of a Mask 175

Epilogue: Reference Matter 199

Works Cited 215

Index 227

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