Established in 1974, the Journal of Japanese Studies features original, analytically rigorous articles from across the humanities and social sciences, including comparative and transnational scholarship in which Japan plays a major part

Saito 36:1

ABSTRACT

 

SATORU SAITO
The Novel’s Other: Detective Fiction and the Literary Project of Tsubouchi Shōyō

 

This essay considers the intricate connection between detective fiction and the novel in the latter half of the 1880s through an examination of Tsubouchi Shōyō’s literary project. A central figure in the articulation of the notion of the modern novel, Shōyō was also one of the first Japanese authors to experiment with detective fiction, translating Anna Katharine Green’s XYZ as Nisegane tsukai in 1887. By reading his theoretical and fictional works in conjunction with this translation, I argue that the detective fiction genre played a critical role in legitimating the inherent contradiction in Shōyō’s theory of the modern novel between its promotion of the moral author and the unethical potential of his mission.

Volume 36, Number 1 (Winter 2010)
© 2010 Society for Japanese Studies