15 research outputs found

    Literatures of resistance under U.S. “cultural siege”: Kazuo Ishiguro’s narratives of occupation

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    Through close readings of An Artist of the Floating World and The Remains of the Day, supported by references to his other works, this article argues that Japanese-British writer Kazuo Ishiguro’s novels betray an understated but distinct anti-American sentiment. Much has been made of the narcissism of Ishiguro’s narrators and their attempts to manipulate historical and personal records to serve their own purposes. However, one of those purposes that have gone undetected is a willful political resistance to the postwar Americanization of Japan and Europe. In other words, the article argues that the novels discussed are, in fact, works of propaganda and, further, that they evidence, with a high degree of subtlety and linguistic sophistication, Ishiguro’s own concerns that world literature and world culture more broadly were, as a result of World War II, subsumed into the American model, becoming homogenized

    The Epistolary Politics of Virginia Woolf & Ta-Nehisi Coates

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    In this essay, Erica Gene Delsandro explores the “layered rhythms” shared by Virginia Woolf’s Three Guineas (1938) and Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Between the World and Me (2015). Both authors, separated by gender, race, and history, employ the epistolary form for political ends, troubling the distinction between private experience and public discourse. Born out of an interdisciplinary positionality, the pairing of Woolf and Coates stands as an example of how feminist reading practices can productively reinvigorate modernist studies particularly and literary studies generally
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