Trauma, Dissociation and Re-enactment in Japanese Literature and Film

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Behavioral Re-enactments
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Category=NH
Contemporary Societies
David C. Stahl
Defensive Fantasies
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Emperor’s Son
eq_art-fashion-photography
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failed mourning studies
female
Female Masks
Foundational Trauma
Lost Love Object
masks
Melancholic Incorporation
Narrative Memory
narrative memory analysis
Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech
psychoanalytic criticism
psychological trauma in Japanese fiction
Ptsd Study
PTSD theory
Recurrent Intrusive Thoughts
Sleeping Beauties
social trauma Japan
Social Traumas
Tea Bowl
Tea Ceremony
Tea Cottage
Tea Gathering
Tea Master
Tea Vessels
transgenerational effects
Transgenerational Transmission
Trauma Story
Unmourned Death
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367172671
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Jan 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Japanese literature and film have frequently been approached using lenses such as language, genre and ideology. Yet, despite a succession of major social traumas that have marked, and in many ways shaped and defined much of modern Japan, Japanese fiction and cinema have not often been examined psychoanalytically.

In this book, David Stahl conducts in-depth readings and interpretations of a set of Japanese novels and film. By introducing the methodology of trauma/PTSD studies, Stahl seeks to provide a better understanding of the insights of Japanese writers and directors into their societies, cultures and histories. In particular, by building on the work of practitioner-theoreticians, such as Pierre Janet and Judith Herman, Stahl analyses a number of key texts, including Kawabata Yasunari’s Sleeping Beauties (1961), Enchi Fumiko’s Female Masks (1958) and Imamura Sho- hei’s Vengeance is Mine (1979). Consequently, through using concepts of social trauma, dissociation, failed mourning, revenge and narrative memory, this book sheds new light on the psychological aftereffects and transgenerational legacies of trauma depicted in Japanese works.

Trauma, Dissociation and Re-enactment in Japanese Literature and Film will be of interest to students and scholars of Japanese Literature and Cinema, as well as those interested in Japanese History and Trauma Studies.

David C. Stahl is Professor of Japanese Literature and Cinema at Binghamton University. His research interests are trauma/PTSD studies and artistic representation of social trauma and its aftereffects.

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