Japanese writer Haruki Murakami has achieved incredible popularity in
his native country and world-wide as well as rising critical acclaim.
Murakami, in addition to receiving most of the major literary awards
in Japan, has been nominated several times for the Nobel Prize. Yet,
his relationship with the Japanese literary community proper (known as
the Bundan) has not been a particularly friendly one. One of
Murakami’s central and enduring themes is a persistent warning not
to suppress our fundamental desires in favor of the demands of society
at large. Murakami’s writing over his career reveals numerous
recurring motifs, but his message has also evolved, creating a
catalogue of works that reveals Murakami to be a challenging author.
Many of those challenges lie in Murakami’s blurring of genre as well
as his rich blending of Japanese and Western mythologies and
styles—all while continuing to offer narratives that attract and
captivate a wide range of readers. Murakami is, as Ōe Kenzaburō once
contended, not a “Japanese writer” so much as a global one, and as
such, he merits a central place in the classroom in order to confront
readers and students, but to be challenged as well. Reading, teaching,
and studying Murakami serves well the goal of rethinking this world.
It will open new lines of inquiry into what constitutes national
literatures, and how some authors, in the era of blurred national and
cultural boundaries, seek now to transcend those boundaries and pursue
a truly global mode of expression.
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Challenging Authors
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9789463004626
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
SensePublishers
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter