Curriculum Vitaes
Profile Information
- Affiliation
- Professor, Faculty of Liberal Arts Department of Liberal Arts, Sophia University
- Degree
- A.B.(Bowdoin College)M.A.(Princeton University)Ph.D(2003, Princeton University)
- Contact information
- s-kono
sophia.ac.jp - Researcher number
- 60439338
- J-GLOBAL ID
- 200901076082697378
- researchmap Member ID
- 5000105676
At the Faculty of Liberal Arts, I am offering courses on comparative literature and Western literature. My recent research topics include translation and circulation of Japanese literature, Japanese literature as world literature, and plurilingualism in modern Japanese literature.
Research Interests
3Research Areas
1Major Research History
10Education
2-
Sep, 1995 - Nov, 2003
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Sep, 1991 - May, 1995
Committee Memberships
4-
Apr, 2022 - Present
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Apr, 2021 - Present
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Aug, 2018 - Jul, 2020
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Apr, 2009 - Mar, 2011
Major Papers
16-
Modern Japanese Literary Studies (Nihon Kindai Bungaku), (102) 71-86, May 15, 2020 Peer-reviewedThis paper examines Mizumura Minae's Shishōsetsu from Left to Right (1995) in terms of plurilingualism, which assumes that both the writer and the reader have proficiency in multiple languages. Specifically,I consider the question of why Minae, the protagonist, decided to write in Japanese rather than English. I approach this issue by imagining the books Minae could have written in English but chose not to. I discuss the question of how and why she made this decision not only in terms of Minae's education in American schools, but also with reference to several relevant contexts, such as the fall of the "West" and the rise of multiculturalism in American academia, Japanese studies in the United States, narrative temporality in the novel, and the self-referential use of the "shishōsetsu" (I-novel) genre. Mizumura's novel shows that the question of language choice in plurilingual conditions raises a series of fundamental questions about linguistic expression in general.
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Journal of Japanese Studies, 32(2) 311-340, Jul 1, 2006
Misc.
32-
The Values in Numbers: Reading Japanese Literature in a Global Information Age by Hoyt Long (review)Monumenta Nipponica, 80(1) 163-167, 2025 InvitedLead author
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Journal of Waseda International House of Literature, 2 59-62, Mar 14, 2024 InvitedLead author
Books and Other Publications
20-
Bensei Shuppan, Jan 12, 2018 (ISBN: 9784585226826)
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Bensei shuppan, Mar 25, 2016 (ISBN: 9784585226611)
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Harrassowitz Verlag, 2014 (ISBN: 9783447101974)
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Aug 30, 2010 (ISBN: 9784140911631)
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University of Minnesota Press, Mar 25, 2009 (ISBN: 9780816653522)In Japan, obsessive adult fans and collectors of manga and anime are known as otaku. Hiroki Azuma’s Otaku offers a critical, philosophical, and historical inquiry into the characteristics and consequences of this consumer subculture. For Azuma, one of Japan’s leading public intellectuals, otaku culture mirrors the transformations of postwar Japanese society and the nature of human behavior in the postmodern era. Azuma argues that the consumption behavior of otaku is representative of the postmodern consumption of culture in general, which sacrifices the search for greater significance to almost animalistic instant gratification. In this context, culture becomes simply a database of plots and characters and its consumers mere “database animals.” A vital non-Western intervention in postmodern culture and theory, Otaku is also an appealing and perceptive account of Japanese popular culture.
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Nihon keizai shinbunsha, Aug 23, 2006 (ISBN: 9784532170714)
Major Presentations
55-
EAJS2023, the 17th International Conference of the European Association for Japanese Studies, Aug 20, 2023
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Academic Memorial Meeting of Humboldt-University in Berlin commemorating Mori Rintarō (Ōgai), Jul 14, 2022 Invited
Professional Memberships
5Research Projects
2-
Kakenhi, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2020 - Mar, 2023
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Kakenhi, Japan Society for the Promotion of Sciences, 2011 - 2014
Social Activities
10Other
22-
Nov, 2014 - Nov, 2014