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

Zanotti 44:1

ABSTRACT

PIERANTONIO ZANOTTI
The Senses of Modernity in Tayama Katai’s “Shōjobyō” (1907)

This essay examines “Shōjobyō” (The girl watcher, 1907), a short story by Tayama Katai (1872‒1930).  It focuses on the discourses on the senses in the narrative construction of its protagonist, Sugita Kojō.  The sense of sight and the condition called shōjobyō play a major role in this construction.  I argue that the interplay between the pathologically inflected inclination called shōjobyō and the technology-enhanced regimes of sensory perception (view through glass, modern means of transportation) described in “Shōjobyō” is crucial in the interpretation of this story as a reflection on the modern condition itself.

Volume 44, Number 1 (Winter 2018)
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