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February 21, 2011

[SSJ: 6535] 1 March 2011, DIJ Study Group: "Trains as Metaphor in the Fiction of Natsume Soseki and Tawada Yoko"

From: DIJ
Date: 2011/02/21

You are invited to our upcoming History and Humanities Study Group on TUESDAY, 1 March 2011, 6.30pm at the German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ) Tokyo (for directions please see http://www.dijtokyo.org).

Our presenters will be CHRISTINE GLENSTED (Waseda
University) and ANNETTE VILSLEV (University of Copenhagen), and the title of their talk will be

TRAVELING PROTAGONISTS:TRAINS AS METAPHOR IN THE FICITON OF NATSUME SOSEKI AND TAWADA YOKO

The train has been a recurrent metaphor of progress, modernity and development in art and literature since the 19th century. The comparative aim of this talk is to discuss how the motif of the train is employed in rather similar ways by two otherwise quite distinct Japanese authors Natsume Soseki (1867 -1916) and Yoko Tawada (born 1960).

In the fiction of Tawada, the train ride is an occasion for reading and writing as well as a topic to be written about. The texts about trains often contain comprehensive meta-fictional dimensions associating the travel along the rail with the unfolding of a fiction.

In Soseki's later novels the traveling on trains, trams or rickshaws of his protagonists is linked to his understanding of consciousness and the descri ption of modernity in Meiji Japan. Furthermore it relates to his idea of nar rative without a beginning or end as a sort of "anti-novel".

We will be focusing on traveling protagonists in order to examine how the physical movement of the train functions as a metaphor for the fluidity of mind in both Soseki's and Tawada's writings. This understanding also affects language and plot development in their fiction. Fluidity, being on the way, moving or becoming, is furthermore a significant factor in the poetology and literary theory of both authors.

Christine Glensted has a M.A. in Comparative Literature and is currently a MEXT Research Student at Waseda University working on a project about Tawada Yoko.
Annette Vilslev is a Ph.d. student in Comparative Literature at the University of Copenhagen writing about the literary theory of Natsume Soseki.

Everybody is welcome to attend but registration at iwata@dijtokyo.org would be helpful.

Approved by ssjmod at 05:06 PM