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Tokyo Barbara E. Thornbury

Tokyo By Barbara E. Thornbury

Tokyo by Barbara E. Thornbury


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Summary

This interdisciplinary collection examines Tokyo in the cultural imagination. The contributors analyze how Tokyo has been perceived and experienced through such cultural lenses as novels, poetry, short stories, and films created in Japan since the 1980s.

Tokyo Summary

Tokyo: Memory, Imagination, and the City by Barbara E. Thornbury

Tokyo: Memory, Imagination, and the City is a collection of eight essays that explore Tokyo urban space from the perspective of memory in works of the imagination-novels, short stories, poetry, essays, and films. Written by scholars of Japanese studies based in England, Germany, Japan, and the United States, the book focuses on texts produced in Japan since the 1980s. The closing years of the Showa period (1926-1989) were a watershed decade of spatial transformation in Tokyo. It was also a time (in Japan, as elsewhere) when conversations about the nature of memory-historical, cultural, collective, and individual-intensified. The contributors to the volume share the view that works of the imagination are constitutive elements of how cities are experienced and perceived. Each of the essays responds to the growing interest in studies on Tokyo with a literary-cultural orientation.

Tokyo Reviews

This book is inspirational reading for the preparation of a trip to Tokyo and for long intercontinental flights from North America and Europe to the city. Inspired by the essays, scientific travellers from the architecture and urban planning community will certainly benefit from reading this book, beyond the visual they expect to see. * disP - The Planning Review *
Barbara E. Thornbury and Evelyn Schulz have put together a marvelous collection of essays on Tokyo in the Japanese cultural imagination, showing how the 'memoryscape' of this great city has dominated and permeated thinking on modern life. The contributors are rigorous and creative in analyzing depictions of Tokyo in literature and film from the bubble economy to the 'lost decade' of the 1990s and beyond. The book takes an interdisciplinary approach to interrogate urban space, memory-making, and the multifaceted history of Tokyo as a built physical location as well as a mental construct. -- Rachael Hutchinson, University of Delaware
The essays in this cohesive, stimulating volume reveal an imaginative history of Tokyo, a city with few landmark monuments but a host of collective and personal memories that inspire nostalgia and belonging, protest and defeat, willful amnesia and creative recollection. This is an innovative volume that teaches us ways to analyze space, place, and memory in creative work. -- Jan Bardsley, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
It is a perhaps inevitable irony that Tokyo, the most combustible of cities, provides such a rich repository of memories. The consequent dynamics and contradictions are dissected and discussed by the contributors to this nuanced and multi-layered analysis of the relationship between Tokyo and its inhabitants as expressed in writing and film. This collection provides an illuminating exploration of how memory both informs and disrupts this relationship, and in so doing it deepens our understanding more broadly of the city, indeed of all cities, and the creative self. -- Paul Waley, University of Leeds
This poignant collection by eight leading scholars analyzes how literature and films from the 1980s to the early twenty-first century reveal the layers of individual and collective memories underlying contemporary Tokyo. More than most other cities, Tokyo has been destroyed and rebuilt in modernization efforts, war, and natural disasters. Because of this, it is a construct through which to view the advances and contractions of Japanese national development. This collection shows the indelible effect that living and writing in Tokyo has had on artistic production. -- Alisa Freedman, University of Oregon

About Barbara E. Thornbury

Barbara E. Thornbury is professor of Japanese studies in the Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Languages and Studies at Temple University. Evelyn Schulz is professor of Japanese studies in the Department of Asian Studies at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.

Table of Contents

Introduction, Barbara E. Thornbury and Evelyn Schulz Chapter 1: "Pulling the Thorns of Suffering: Remembering Sugamo in Ito Hiromi's "The Thorn-Puller," Jeffrey Angles Chapter 2: "Pavane for a Dead Princess, or Exploring Geographies of the City, the Mind, and the Social: Fujita Yoshinaga's Tenten and Miki Satoshi's Adrift in Tokyo," Kristina Iwata-Weickgenannt Chapter 3: "On Moebius Strips, Ruins and Memory: The Intertwining of Places and Times in Hino Keizo's Tokyo," Mark Pendleton Chapter 4: "Mapping Environments of Memory, Nostalgia, and Emotions in 'Tokyo Spatial (Auto)biographies,'" Evelyn Schulz Chapter 5: "Held Hostage to History: Okuda Hideo's 'Olympic Ransom,'" Bruce Suttmeier Chapter 6: "The Tokyo Cityscape, Sites of Memory, and Hou Hsiao-Hsien's Cafe Lumiere," Barbara E. Thornbury Chapter 7: "Remaking Tayama Katai's Futon (1907) in Nakajima Kyoko's FUTON (2003): Remembrance and Renewal of Urban Space through the Art of Rewriting," Angela Yiu Chapter 8: "The Child of Memory: Cityscapes in Tsushima Yuko's Short Fiction of the 1980s," Eve Zimmerman

Additional information

NGR9781498523677
9781498523677
1498523676
Tokyo: Memory, Imagination, and the City by Barbara E. Thornbury
New
Hardback
Lexington Books
2017-10-17
212
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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Customer Reviews - Tokyo