Introduction: Owning up to Sōseki -- Fables of property : nameless cats, stray sheep, trickster badgers -- House under a shadow : disowning the psychology of possessive individualism in the gate -- Property and sociological knowledge : Sōseki and the...
mehr
Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Potsdamer Straße
Fernleihe:
keine Fernleihe
Introduction: Owning up to Sōseki -- Fables of property : nameless cats, stray sheep, trickster badgers -- House under a shadow : disowning the psychology of possessive individualism in the gate -- Property and sociological knowledge : Sōseki and the gift of narrative -- The tragedy of the market : women, younger brothers, and colonial subjects in Kokoro -- Epilogue: Who owns Sōseki? Or, how not to belong to world literature. "Michael K. Bourdaghs presents a radical reframing of the works of Natsume Sōseki--widely considered to be Japan's greatest modern novelist--as critical and creative responses to the emergence of new forms of property ownership in nineteenth-century Japan."--