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Kevin Michael Doak

Dreams of Difference

The Japan Romantic School and the Crisis of Modernity

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$60.00, £41.95 hardcover

9780520083776

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July 1994, Available worldwide
Also in: East Asian Studies; Asian Literature
From 1935 to 1945, the Japan Romantic School (Nihon Romanha), a group of major intellectuals and literary figures, explored issues concerning politics, literature, and nationalism in ways that still influence cultural discourse in Japan today. Kevin Doak's timely study is a broad critique of modernity in early twentieth-century Japan. He uses close readings and translations of texts and poems to suggest that the school's interest in romanticism stemmed from its attempt to surmount the "cultural crisis" of lost traditions. This attempt to overcome modernity eventually reduced the movement's earlier critical impulses to expressions of nationalist longing.
"Doak's book is built on an impressive foundation of English and Japanese scholarship. . . . [It] tells a fascinating story about a key topic in modern Japanese cultural history and also provokes serious thought and discussion."—Journal of Japanese Studies



Acknowledgments
Prologue: Nationalism, Romanticism, and the Problem of Modernity

1. Toward an Ironic Praxis: Yasuda Yojuro and the Aesthetics of Totality
2. Indeterminate Poetics: The Romantic Style
3. Return to Parnassus: The Exoticism of the Self
4. The Ethics of Identity: Kamei Katsuichiro and the Search for a New Subject
5. The Production of a Culture of the Same

Epilogue: Romanticism Rehabilitated
Appendixes
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Kevin M. Doak is Associate Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures and Associate Professor of History at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Chanpagne.
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