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2024 | 34 | 69 | 47-63

Article title

Kafkovské motivy v poválečné japonské literatuře: Povídky „Každodennost ve snu“ Šimaa Tošia a „Jestřáb“ Išikawy Džuna

Authors

Content

Title variants

EN
Kafkaesque Motifs in Post-war Japanese Literature: Shimao Toshio’s“Everyday Death in a Dream” and Ishikawa Jun’s “The Raptor”

Languages of publication

CS

Abstracts

EN
After losing the war in 1945, Japan was in ruins — both physical and mental. Although it was gradually rebuilding itself economically since the late 1940s, the lost war, occupation, change of system and the upheaval of values caused mental trauma and identity crisis for many of its inhabitants. Motifs typically associated with Franz Kafka — especially his existentialism, absurdity, avant-garde methods and dream imagery against the background of everyday reality, create an interesting parallel to this situation and seeped into the works of post-war authors. This paper focuses on two postwar authors, Shimao Toshio 島尾敏夫 (1917–1986) and Ishikawa Jun 石川淳 (1899–1987), and examines how “kafkaesque” writing and reality of post-war Japan intertwine in “Everyday Life in a Dream” (Yume no naka de no nichijō 夢の中での日常, 1948) and “The Raptor” (Taka 鷹, 1953).

Contributors

author
  • Univerzita Karlova

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-8997626f-5a64-46d4-a1c3-e2349c831d3b
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