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      Writing Okinawa
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      Book

      Writing Okinawa

      DOI link for Writing Okinawa

      Writing Okinawa book

      Narrative acts of identity and resistance

      Writing Okinawa

      DOI link for Writing Okinawa

      Writing Okinawa book

      Narrative acts of identity and resistance
      ByDavinder L. Bhowmik
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2008
      eBook Published 16 May 2008
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203931165
      Pages 248
      eBook ISBN 9780203931165
      Subjects Area Studies, Language & Literature
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      Get Citation

      Bhowmik, D.L. (2008). Writing Okinawa: Narrative acts of identity and resistance (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203931165

      ABSTRACT

      Writing Okinawa is the first comprehensive study in English of Okinawan fiction, from it’s emergence in the early twentieth-century through its most recent permutations. It provides readings of major authors and texts set against a carefully researched presentation of the region’s political and social history; at the same time, it thoughtfully engages with current critical perspective with perspectives on subaltern identity, colonialism, and post-colonialism, and the nature of "regional," "minority," and "minor" literatures.

      Is Okinawan fiction, replete with geographically specific themes such as language loss, identity, and war, a regional literature, distinct among Japanese letters for flourishes of local color that offer a reprieve for the urban-weary, or a minority literature that serves as a site for creative resistance and cultural renewal? This question drives the book’s argument, making it interpretative rather than merely descriptive. Not only does the book provide a critical introduction to the major works of Okinawan literature, it also argues that Okinawa’s writers consciously exploit, to good effect the overlap that exists between regional and minority literature. In so doing, they produce a rich body of work, a great deal of which challenges the notion of a unified nation that seamlessly rises from a single language and culture.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |16 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 1|25 pages

      The color orange in Yamagusuku Seichu- ’s Okinawan fiction

      chapter 2|21 pages

      Subaltern identity in Taisho- Japan

      chapter 3|26 pages

      Marching forward, glancing backward: Language and nostalgia in prewar Okinawan fiction

      chapter 4|35 pages

      O shiro Tatsuhiro and constructions of a mythic Okinawa

      chapter 5|34 pages

      Postreversion fiction and Medoruma Shun

      chapter 6|21 pages

      Darkness visible in Sakiyama Tami’s island stories

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