Mostri del Giappone
Narrative, figure, egemonie della dis-locazione identitaria
Title (it)
Mostri del Giappone
Subtitle (it)
Narrative, figure, egemonie della dis-locazione identitaria
Language
Italian
Description (it)
Il volume presenta una teoria transculturale dei mostri con un approccio multidisciplinare ispirato ai <em>monster studies</em>, impiegando metodi che vanno dalla critica letteraria agli studi postcoloniali, all’antropologia, sociologia e storia culturale.
Particolare attenzione è rivolta all’affermazione di alcuni fra i mostri giapponesi più popolari, sia del passato che del presente: il tengu (demone divino della montagna), il kappa (mostro-folletto dell’acqua), i mostri ibridi di Miyazaki Hayao, e infine il più ampio processo trans/nazionale di mostrificazione del Giappone globalizzato.
Collana: Ca' Foscari Japanese Studies 2
Sottocollana: Religion and Thought 1
Description (en)
Contemporary Japan has become the stage for displaying an endless assortment of traditional, modern, and postmodern monsters. But why have old and new monsters gained such prominence with regard to folkloric customs, premodern urban culture, contents industry, and transnational flows? How is this popularity connected to national identity formation and institutional legitimacy, as exemplified by the modern rise of yōkaigaku, the nativist science of monsters? And finally, what is the critical potential of monstrosity in terms of displacing naturalised identification and Othering, within the globalising entanglement of selfrepresentations in Japan and hetero-representations of Japan?
These questions aim to complicate our understanding of ‘Japan’ and ‘monsters’ in order to contribute to a transcultural theory of monsters, in contrast to prevalent investigations that focus instead on the cultural-intrinsic or the historical-specific Japaneseness of its monstrous repertoire. The book explores the «ontological liminality» addressed in monster theory (Cohen, 1996) by means of a multi-disciplinary approach, cross-cutting literary studies, visual studies, cultural anthropology, history and sociology. More specifically, it examines the discursive emergence of monstrous Japan, as configured by the modern intertwining of hegemonic Occidentalism, Orientalism, and self-Orientalism.
The volume brings together different case studies on some of the most popular monsters in Japan, from the classical past to the contemporary present. Particular attention is given to the interlinking of narratives, figures, and hegemonies involved in the establishment of the tengu (the mountain monster), the kappa (the water goblin), the hybrid monsters in Miyazaki Hayao’s animation, and the wider trans/national monstering process shaping present Japan.
Series: Ca' Foscari Japanese Studies 2
Sub-series: Religion and Thought 1
Keywords (it)
Lingue e culture del Medio ed Estremo Oriente
DOI
10.14277/978-88-97735-68-7
ISBN
978-88-97735-68-7
Author of the analogue object
Toshio Miyake
Licence Selected
Organization Association
Università Ca' Foscari Venezia – Editoria > Edizioni Ca' Foscari
Series Title
Ca’ Foscari Japanese Studies. Religion and Thought
Volume
2 / 1
Publishing Address
Venezia
Publisher
Edizioni Ca' Foscari - Digital Publishing
Publication Date
2014-10-29
Link to bibliographic information
https://polovea.sebina.it/SebinaOpac/resource/mostri-del-giappone-narrative-figure-egemonie-della-dislocazione-identitaria/VEA2440505
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Persistent identifier
https://phaidra.unipd.it/o:432161 - Other links and identifiers
DOI
https://doi.org/10.14277/978-88-97735-68-7ISBN
978-88-97735-68-7 - Content
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- DetailsUploaderResource typeText (PDF)Formatapplication/pdfCreated05.08.2019 12:03:24 UTC
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