In this Book
Dances with Sheep: The Quest for Identity in the Fiction of Murakami Haruki
Book
2020
Published by:
University of Michigan Press
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
summary
As a spokesman for disaffected youth of the post-1960s, Murakami Haruki has become one of the most important voices in contemporary Japanese literature, and he has gained a following in the United States through translations of his works. In Dances with Sheep, Matthew Strecher examines Murakami’s fiction—and, to a lesser extent, his nonfiction—for its most prevalent structures and themes. Strecher also delves into the paradoxes in Murakami’s writings that confront critics and casual readers alike. Murakami writes of “serious” themes yet expresses them in a relatively uncomplicated style that appeals to high school students as well as scholars; and his fictional work appears to celebrate the pastiche of postmodern expression, yet he rejects the effects of the postmodern on contemporary culture as dangerous.
Strecher’s methodology is both historical and cultural as he utilizes four distinct yet interwoven approaches to analyze Murakami’s major works: the writer’s “formulaic” structure with serious themes; his play with magical realism; the intense psychological underpinnings of his literary landscape; and his critique of language and its capacity to represent realities, past and present. Dances with Sheep links each of these approaches with Murakami’s critical focus on the fate of individual identity in contemporary Japan. The result is that the simplicity of the Murakami hero, marked by lethargy and nostalgia, emerges as emblematic of contemporary humankind, bereft of identity, direction, and meaning. Murakami’s fiction is reconstructed in Dances with Sheep as a warning against the dehumanizing effects of late-model capitalism, the homogenization of the marketplace, and the elimination of effective counterculture in Japan.
Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title Page
pp. i
Series Page
pp. ii
Title Page
pp. iii
Copyright
pp. iv
Dedication
pp. v-vi
Contents
pp. vii-viii
Preface
pp. ix-xiv
Acknowledgments
pp. xv-xvi
Abbreviations
pp. xvii-xviii
Introduction
pp. 1-26
1. Mimesis, Formula, and Identity
pp. 27-64
2. Metonymy, Magic Realism, and the Opening of the âOtherâ
pp. 65-108
3. Desire, the Symbolic Order, and Mass Society
pp. 109-156
4. Historiography, Ideology, and the Politics of Representation
pp. 157-205
Conclusion. The Reluctant Postmodernist
pp. 206-215
Bibliography
pp. 216-225
Index
pp. 226-236
| ISBN | 9780472902026 |
|---|---|
| Related ISBN(s) | 9780472038336, 9780472128068, 9781929280070 |
| DOI | 10.1353/book.77823![]() |
| MARC Record | Download |
| OCLC | 1184508227 |
| Launched on MUSE | 2020-09-09 |
| Language | English |
| Open Access | Yes |
| Creative Commons | CC-BY-NC-ND |




