PAJLS (Proceedings of the Japanese Literary Studies), vol. 1

(Summer, 2000) has been recently published. It is the proceedings of the 1999 AJLS annual meeting at Colorado.
Here is a copy of the table of contents.

PAJLS, Vol. 1, Summer, 2000

 

Issues of Canonicity and Canon Formation in Japanese Literary Studies

Stephen D. Miller, Editor
Sandy Adler, Production Editor

Foreword. Stephen D. Miller    v   
KEYNOTE ADDRESSES

Izumi Kyoka no sakuhin no Nihonteki tokucho ni tsuite.
Kubota Jun  3

Uta no unmei.  Takahashi Mutsuo  15

From Canon Formation to Evaluational Reformation: Manyo, Genji, Basho.
Suzuki Sadami  25

 

OUTSIDERS ON THE INSIDECOKINAWAN, RESIDENT KOREAN, COLONIAL, AND BURAKU LITERATURE AND THE CANON

Dilution or Diversification--Okinawan Works and the Akutagawa Prize.
Kirsten Cather    47

Shimazaki Toson's Hakai : (Re)writing and (Re)reading the Canon.
Sayuri Oyama    59

Between Anxiety and Celebration: Resident Korean Writers and the Japanese Literary Canon.
Melissa Wender   77

 

GENRE, POETICS, AND MODERNITY IN CONSTRUCTION OF JAPANESE LITERARY TRADITION

Canonization and Commodification: Illustrations to the Tales of Ise in the Modern Era.
Joshua S. Mostow   89

The Strange Fate of Monogatari after the Genji: The Genealogy of the Term "Giko," from Style to Subgenre.
Robert Omar Khan  121

The Tale of the Heike: Its Modern Critics and the Medieval Past.
David T. Bialock  141

Poetic Essence (Hon'i) as Japanese Literary Canon.
Haruo Shirane   153

The Discourse of "Makoto" and the Canonization of Tokugawa Waka.
Peter Flueckiger   165

Aesthetic Politics and Literary History: Shinkokinshu and Kazamaki Keijiro.  
Masaaki Kinugasa   177

 

CONCEALMENT OF POLITICS/POLITICS OF CONCEALMENT

De-Politicization of Literature: Social Darwinism and Interiority.
Atsuko Ueda     185

"Samurai" Fantasies in Late-Nineteenth-Century
James Reichert   193

Shiga Naoya no "bungakusei": "Bungaku" no kaishaku kodo.
Oono Ryoji   207

Proletarian Literature Reconsidered. Heather Bowen-Struyk   221

Hell at Home: Nakagami Kenji and the Discovery of Arthur Rimbaud.
Eve Zimmerman    233

 

COUNTERFEITS, CANNIBALS, AND CRUSADERS: REINVENTING "CLASSICS" FROM THE INSIDE OUT

Fabricating Teika:  The Usagi Forgeries and Their Authentic Influence.
Paul S. Atkins    249

Cannibalizing Memory: Teika, Sanetaka, and Fujioka's Sagoromo.
Charo B. D'Etcheverry      259

Political License and the Poetic Canon of the Imperial Waka Anthologies.
Stefania Burk     269

 

NUNS, FARMERS, AND CHOCOLATIERS: ADAPTATIONS OF THE CANON ACROSS TIME AND SPACE IN JAPANESE POETRY

In His Footsteps: Shokyu-ni and the Canonization of Basho.
Roger K. Thomas      287

Shiki ariki Nohon-shugi: Reconsiderations of the Haiku Canon by Japanese-Brazilian Farm Poets.
Nobuko Adachi     305

"Chocolate Translations," "Bittersweet Revolutions," and "Tanka and Photo": Tawara Machi's New Renditions of Midaregami and Questions of Canonicity in Modern Japanese Classical Poetry.
James Stanlaw        329

 

ISSUES OF CANONICITY FROM MEIJI TO TODAY

The Canonicity of Yosano Akiko's Midaregami.
Leith Morton                363

The Boundaries of the Japaneseness Between "Nihon bungaku" and "Nihongo bungaku."
Faye Yuan Kleeman    377

Discovering and Textualizing Memory: The Tsuioku Shosetsu of Naka Kansuke and Takahashi Mutsuo.
Jeffrey Angles     389

From the Margins of the Canon: Kikuchi Yuho and the Katei Shosetsu.
Ken K. Ito    405

In Search of Insignificance? Modern Literary Anthologies, Premodern Genres, and the Failed Canonization of Uchida Hyakken.
Rachel DiNitto     417

 

EARLY SITINGS AND CODIFICATIONS OF A CLASSICAL LITERARY CANON

Strangers Within: Noin shu and the Canonical Status of Private Poetry Collections.
Stephen M. Forrest     431

Women, Readerly Response, and the Problem of Imitation: Mumyozoshi and the Vexed Beginnings of the Monogatari Canon.
Edith Sarra      447

Rengashi Sogi no koten kenkyu (The Kokinshu Commentaries and the Classical Studies of Renga Master Sogi).
Sook Young Wang              471

"Siting Translation": Translation and Classical Japanese Literary Canon Formation in the United States .
Lynne K. Miyake   487

Developing a Rakugo Canon and the Parodic Use of Canonical Texts in Rakugo .
Patricia Welch       503

From Modernist Outsiders to the New Canon Writers: Japanese Modernist Writers in Contemporary Japanese Literary Canonization.
Junko Ikezu Williams   521

 


Octorber 09, 2001