研究者業績
基本情報
研究分野
1経歴
3-
2024年9月 - 現在
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2024年4月 - 現在
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2019年9月 - 現在
学歴
4-
2019年8月 - 2024年8月
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2015年9月 - 2019年8月
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2013年4月 - 2015年8月
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2006年8月 - 2011年5月
受賞
6-
2022年9月
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2019年9月
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2019年9月
論文
2-
Humanities 12(4) 57-57 2023年6月29日 査読有り招待有りScholarship on letters in modern Japanese literature typically describes their discursive transformation from objects of practical import to texts of literary significance in the late Meiji 30s and 40s, a transformation contemporaneous to and engendered by the sudden explosion of interest in autobiographical literary texts. Such an approach, however, unintentionally denigrates the complexity of late-Meiji era fiction’s negotiation with the epistolary discourse that flourished in this era. Seeking a broader engagement with this hitherto underexamined discourse, I take Tayama Katai’s (1872–1930) famous I-novel, The Quilt (1907), as a test case, arguing that the letters embedded there engage with the contemporary conversation on letters on four levels: content, linguistic style, subjectivity, and hermeneutics. I argue that, far from reaffirming the overlap between letters and literature, Katai’s text evinces a consistently oppositional stance toward contemporary epistolary dogma, problematizing, interrogating, and subverting it at every turn. I conclude by proposing that this defiant stance toward typical conceptualizations of the letter is common to other I-novels of the period, suggesting that the I-novel was only born through a conspicuous disavowal of the letter form.
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Review of Japanese Culture and Society 33/34(1) 134-143 2021年 査読有り
MISC
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Review of Japanese Culture and Society 31(1) 204-219 2019年