Death and Desire in Contemporary Japan
Representing, Practicing, Performing
open access | peer reviewed-
a cura di
- Andrea De Antoni - Ritsumeikan University, Japan - email
- Massimo Raveri - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email orcid profile
Abstract
The title of this volume refers to the Buddhist concepts of suffering, impermanence and dependent origination, which link the ideas of Death and Desire. This book stems from a research conducted in the last few years at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, supported by the Japan Foundation. A great deal of work has been done by scholars in various disciplines about dying in Japan, but research has tended to focus on the practices through which death is settled and institutionalised. Yet, what about untamed and unsettled death? What about the cases in which death cannot be successfully coped with by ritual means? What happens if institutions and discourses are not enough to tame it? What about the cases in which unsettled death suddenly intrudes the social? What are the forms it takes and the consequences it has in the social? These are the questions that the volume addresses, by enmeshing representations, practices and performing arts, through contributions that rely on approaches from different disciplines. Each of them analyses one of the multiple and fragmented possibilities in which untamed death can tame the social.
Keywords Witness Literature • Leo Tolstoy • Biyanlu • England • Tsukamoto Shin’ya • Lacan • Distance • Body • Female Desire • Haunting • Identity Quest • Cross-Gendered Performance • Dogen • Japan • Kinosaki nite • Psychoanalysis • Hijikata Tatsumi • Cinema • Hiroshima • Butō • Shibusawa Tatsuhiko • Memory • Death • Storytelling • Shiseikan • Ghosts • Autopsy • Edgar Morin • Salvation • Actor Network • Sociology • Sony • Coroners • Literary Theory • Corporeality • Shiga Naoya • Dark Tourism • Nagasaki • Rokugatsu no hebi • Corpse • Anti-Dance • Plato • Acephale • Natural • Body and Object • Izutsu • Dōjōji • Eroticism • Personhood • Philosophy of Death • Selfhood • Matsushita Denki • Dream • Desire • Mugen noh • Company-sponsored Funeral • Company’s Founder • Vladimir Jankélévitch • Unnatural • Atomic Bomb • Mujō
Permalink http://doi.org/10.14277/978-88-6969-151-5 | e-ISBN 978-88-6969-151-5 | ISBN (PRINT) 978-88-6969-150-8 | Pubblicato 31 Maggio 2017 | Lingua en, it
Copyright © 2017 Andrea De Antoni, Massimo Raveri. This is an open-access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction is permitted, provided that the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. The license allows for commercial use. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
Contents
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The Magnified Body of Survival
Tracing Communication Paradigms in Hiroshima and Nagasaki's Storytelling
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A Dream to Challenge the ‘World of Dreams’
Evanescence and Desire in Ano ie (1953) by Enchi Fumiko
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The Funeral in Contemporary Japanese Society
The Company-sponsored Funeral of the Founder. Arrangement and Creation of the Most Important Funeral Service in the Company’s History
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Lust for Death
Dark Tourism, Creation and Consumption of Haunted Places in Contemporary Kyoto
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Negotiating the Unusual, Classifying the Unnatural
The Reporting and Investigation of Medical-related Deaths in England and Japan
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Discourses on Death-and-Life in Modern Japan and the Desire behind Them
Quest for the New Identity among Modern Japanese Elites
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“Each Death is Unique”
Beyond Epistemic Transfiguration in Thanatology
Introduction