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Article type: Cover
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
Cover1-
Published: June 10, 1982
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Article type: Cover
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
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Yasuyoshi Sekiguchi
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
1-11
Published: June 10, 1982
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1926 was a memorable year for Aono Suekichi. Having resolved to withdraw from political activity in order to devote himself to literary criticism, he found himself a man of the times. He produced a flurry of articles and was drawn into a number of debates, the most important being, of course, that concerning goal-consciousness. This argument was to linger on into 1927. Other than this much-publicized debate, Suekichi experienced two others in the course of 1926. One involved Hirotsu Kazuo, and the other, Masamune Hakucho. Both of these debates provide useful material for understanding the Aono Suekichi of 1926, the Aono Suekichi, that is, who proclaimed the theory of goal-consciousness. This essay attempts to trace the development of this theory by examining the two less-known debates.
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Masaru Ogasawara
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
12-21
Published: June 10, 1982
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Bosetsurin is based on the tenant-farmer dispute in Tsukigata Village in Hokkaido which reached its peak in October of 1927. Takaji began this work the following month and had it half finished by January of 1928. The latter part was probably begun in April and quickly written up. The Tsukigata dispute ended in victory for the tenant farmers. Why, then, does Bosetsurin end in their defeat and the hero's committing arson? Confirming the points made by Kudo Tadahiko in "Takiji on the Rise : To Bosetsurin"(Obunronmo 4,10,1971), this essay will probe the activities and psychological state of the Takiji who experienced the Otaru general elections in 1928 and the 3-15 incident, the Takiji who wrote Bosetsurin with Arishima Takeo's Kain no Matsuei in the back of his mind.
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Shumei Lin
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
22-33
Published: June 10, 1982
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Three works may be listed as marking Nakano Shigeharu's start as a proletarian writer : Shomen; Kozosan no Tegami; and Kangeikai. In these three works may be found the themes of Nakano Shigeharu as a proletarian writer: (1) the ethical demands upon a member of the intelligentsia participating in revolutionary movements; (2) the political demands upon Nakano as a "Fukumo-toist" ; and (3) literary demands emanating from the writer's internal needs. In order to meet these three demands, Nakano adopted the point-of-view of young men. It is dimcult, however, to can this novel a success. This is because Nakano began with the intention of describing the permeation of a group by a left-wing spirit. The youths through whom the action is recounted are all portrayed as belonging to the vanguard, and therefore the literary requirement that the people be given a voice is not fulfilled since the youths'class anger and sorrows go unexpressed. Therefore, the ethical demand that the proletarian writer not remain a spectator of revolutionary struggles is not met in practice.
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Toshihiko Izu
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
43-54
Published: June 10, 1982
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Hayama wrote Umi ni Ikurubeki Hitobito while in prison, where the horrors of daily life often drove him to extreme despair. He was to end up writing a conversion statement declaring his intent to withdraw from aii political activity. By bringing together the prisoners, robbed of all humanity, and the proletariat, Hayama was able to discIose the essence of the proletariat as that of a group deprived of the right to live as human beings. Hayama was also led to think of the plight of his family while he was imprisoned and was finally driven to the conversion statement which resulted in his release. He sought to express the humanity not only of those workers at the forefront of the class struggle, but also of those workers lacking in consciousness, buried in their work, and even of ne'er-do-well types, He stressed that the sufferings imposed by daily life constituted the origins of the proletarian movement and proletarian literature.
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Kiyomi Igarashi
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
56-57
Published: June 10, 1982
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Yoshitomi Abe
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
58-69
Published: June 10, 1982
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This essay studies the role of metaphor as a supplement to the readings offered by the surface layer of a work. I interpreted the historical models scattered throughout the Genji as constituting a metaphoric structure. I took asnetonymic the vertical structure underlying the work, transmitting the commonaffective experiences of the age. Concretely speaking, I have dealt with Fujiwara no Yasutada, traditionally thought of as the model for Kashiwagi, and Sugawara no Michizane, Hikaru Genji's model. An analysis focusing on Kashiwagi's death shows it to be not merely the metaphoric fate of the child of Michizane's banisher, but a metonymic transformation containing the work's theme. That is to say, the world of Part II of the Genjj, standing in contrast to that of Part I,which is a tale about kinghood, destroys the latter's absoluteness. The thematic significance of Kashiwagi's existence is to constitute the core of an anti-kinghood tale.
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Hideyuki Sakai
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
70-82
Published: June 10, 1982
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What is the nature of essay-writing in the Hyakkien Zuihitsu? This collection contains pieces that were first published as novels. For Hyakken, the essay form has nothing to do with style, but only with content: the essay is either an "account of humanity" or an "account of social life."When the mystical is recounted, it is called a novel, even if the mode is essayistic. The distinctive feature of the Hyakkien Zuihitsu is its novelistic quality. It is influenced by Natsume Soseki's I Am a Cat and consists of a deformation of actual experience, This essay pursues this issue by comparing the collection with Hyakken's diaries from the same period.
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
83-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
83-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
84-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
84-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
84-85
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
85-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
85-86
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese], [in Japanese], [in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
86-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
86-87
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
87-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
87-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
88-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
88-
Published: June 10, 1982
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[in Japanese]
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
88-
Published: June 10, 1982
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Masahiro Sawa
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
89-94
Published: June 10, 1982
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Keizi Yamagiwa
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
95-97
Published: June 10, 1982
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Kota Sakamaki
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
97-98
Published: June 10, 1982
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Yuzo Hata
Article type: Article
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
98-101
Published: June 10, 1982
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Article type: Bibliography
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
105-102
Published: June 10, 1982
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Article type: Appendix
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
106-
Published: June 10, 1982
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Article type: Appendix
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
106-
Published: June 10, 1982
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Article type: Appendix
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
107-
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Article type: Appendix
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
App1-
Published: June 10, 1982
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Article type: Cover
1982 Volume 31 Issue 6 Pages
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Published: June 10, 1982
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