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Abstract
STEPHEN
DODD
Darkness Transformed:
Illness in the Work of Kajii Motojirō
Illness is a useful metaphor to understand Kajii Motojirō’s place in the
intellectual context of his times. His stay at a hot-spring resort for
16 months due to tuberculosis-related problems represented a kind of
quarantine from the cultural and literary center of Tokyo. On the other
hand, his illness provided a form of empowerment, opening links to other
socially and politically marginalized groups. He found echoes to his own
literary approach in Charles Baudelaire’s melancholic modernist
writings. As he approached death, Kajii articulated a concept of
darkness that attempted to go beyond definitions of both life and death.
Volume
33, Number 1 (Winter 2007) © 2007 Society for Japanese Studies
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