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Nina Cornyetz - Dangerous women, deadly words: phallic fantasy and modernity in three Japanese writers

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Dangerous Women, Deadly Words is a materialist-feminist, psychoanalytic analysis of a modern Japanese literary tropethe dangerous womanin the works of three twentieth-century writers: Izumi Kyoka (1873-1939), Enchi Fumiko (1905-86), and Nakagami Kenji (1946-92). Linked to archaisms and magical realms, the trope of the dangerous, spiritually empowered woman culls from and commingles archetypes from throughout the Japanese canon, including mountain witches, female shamans, and snake-women. In radical opposition to the conventional interpretation of the trope as a repository for transhistorical notions of female essence and Japaneseness, the author reads the dangerous woman as connected in complex ways with twentieth-century Japanese epistemological upheavals: the negotiation of modern phallic subjectivity, modernization of a homosocial economy, the radically changed status of women, reified maternity, compulsory heterosexuality, and the function of literature.The dangerous woman enabled the literary birth of a modern, phallic, national subject as its constitutive Other, the locus of originary desire, thus the domain of the Lacanian Real and, accordingly, the abject. Determined by the cultural abhorrence that gives shape in language to the earliest psychic processes of separating self from not-self, the dangerous woman is also the locus for jouissance, a type of erotic pleasure that threatens the stability of the experiential subject.The books close literary readings are deeply anchored in the gendered cultural and literary characteristics of three periods in Japans modernity. The author traces the trope of the dangerous woman through its establishment as a male imaginary by gothic storyteller Kyoka, its subsequent cooption for female erotic agency by Enchi, and its ultimate destabilization by Nakagami through a phallic retroping of archaisms partly dependent on an equation of the social discourses on outcaste pollution with those of homosexual and female abjection.

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title Dangerous Women Deadly Words Phallic Fantasy and Modernity in - photo 1

title:Dangerous Women, Deadly Words : Phallic Fantasy and Modernity in Three Japanese Writers
author:Cornyetz, Nina.
publisher:Stanford University Press
isbn10 | asin:0804732124
print isbn13:9780804732123
ebook isbn13:9780585091389
language:English
subjectJapanese literature--20th century--History and criticism, Sex in literature, Feminism and literature, Izumi, Kyoka,--1873-1939, Enchi, Fumiko,--1905- , Nakagami, Kenji,--1946-
publication date:1999
lcc:PL726.67.S5C67 1999eb
ddc:895.6/093538
subject:Japanese literature--20th century--History and criticism, Sex in literature, Feminism and literature, Izumi, Kyoka,--1873-1939, Enchi, Fumiko,--1905- , Nakagami, Kenji,--1946-
Dangerous Women, Deadly Words
Phallic Fantasy and Modernity in Three Japanese Writers
Nina Cornyetz
Stanford University Press
STANFORD, CALIFORNIA
STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Stanford, California
1999 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University
Printed in the United States of America
CIP data appear at the end of the book
TO THE MEMORY OF NAKAGAMI KENJI
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I would like to thank the Japan Foundation for their support of this study in the form of a twelve-month postdoctoral grant spanning x995-96. I am also grateful to Rutgers University for liberating me from teaching duties during that time and to all the members of the East Asian Studies Program, especially Peter Li, Don Roden, and Paul Schalow, for their enthusiastic support of my work and for their friendship.
Special gratitude is also extended to Paul Anderer, Brett de Bary, Edward Fowler, Carol Gluck, Victor Koschmann, Barbara Ruch, Naoki Sakai, and Edward Seidensticker for their wise counsel over the years, their generosity with their time and knowledge, their varied mentorships, and their kindness.
And finally, I thank those friends and colleagues who took time out of their very busy schedules to read and comment on portions of this book in its various manifestations and stages. I am most grateful to Asada Akira, Azuma Hiroki, Mark Driscoll, Karatani Kojin*, Margherita Long, Mizuta Noriko, Nagahara Yutaka, Louisa Schein, J. Keith Vincent, Janet Walker, Yomota Inuhiko, and Xudong Zhang, each of whom offered edifying commentary on, as well as general support for, this study. I am equally indebted to Hosea Hirata and the other, anonymous reviewer at Stanford, who not only were timely in their responses but also guided my hand toward necessary revisions. Hosea Hirata also took extra time to check some of my Kyoka* translations against the original and to offer his advice on some particularly confusing passages, for which I am truly grateful. Likewise I thank Kono* Shion for his help in deciphering some of Nakagami's convoluted early writings. In the end, of course, whatever faults remain are all mine. I also thank my partner, Toshiaki Ozawa, for his love, immeasurably helpful intellectual insights, and patient tolerance of my obsessive-compulsive involvement with the manuscript during the past two-and-a-half years.
CONTENTS
Introduction
1
Part I. Izumi Kyoka*
1 Speculum
21
2 Leaky Archetypes
28
3 Perverse Maternity: Blood from the Breast
45
4 Michiyuki Toward Jouissance
60
5 Language and Bodies; or, Never Write Words on Sitting Cushions
75
Part II. Enchi Fumiko
6 Vengeance
99
7 (Un)reproductivities: Maternity and Sex
104
8 Scripted Women Bound by Blood: Polluted Flows, Sacred Flows
115
9. Gendered Performances: Masculinizing Buddhism, Feminizing Shinto
127
10 Matrix and Metramorphosis
140
Part III. Nakagami Kenji
11 Dangerous Men and All That Jazz
157
12 Tracing Origins: Landscape and Interiority
168
13 The Body: Deformities, Nasty Blood, and Sexual Violence
186
14 An Ambivalent Masculinist Politics
205
Afterword
227
Notes
235
Works Cited
275
Index
293

Page 1
INTRODUCTION
I begin this introduction with a reminiscence: this book has its origins in my attempt to come to terms with a representation of femaleness that I came across repeatedly in texts of modern Japanese literature, in the form of a trope that I will be calling "the dangerous woman." In the late 1980s, I began my dissertation on Izumi Kyoka* (I873-1939), the first of the three writers that I focus on in this book.1 At around the same time, I belatedly read the "ovarian" French feminist critical text of 1975,
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