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LITERATURE - JAPAN (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   124532


Equivocal endings and the theme of love in Murakami Haruki's lo / Yeung, Virginia   Journal Article
Yeung, Virginia Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article provides a close reading of three of Murakami Haruki's most representative love stories: Norwegian Wood, South of the Border, West of the Sun, and Sputnik Sweetheart. It aims to explore the representation of love in these novels through investigating their equivocal or inconclusive endings. I argue that equivocality is incorporated into these memoir-style works of fiction by analysing narrative features of the final scene. Norwegian Wood is narrated in such a way that the centre of orientation gradually shifts from the 'narrating self' to the 'narrated self', a shift that reduces the distance between narrator and reader and adds indeterminacy to the ending. The last episode of Sputnik Sweetheart is temporally destabilised by a shift to simultaneous narration, making the scene appear imaginary or unreal. In South of the Border, West of the Sun, the plot arrangement allows for multi-interpretation. I argue that Murakami, in all these stories, has purposefully adopted these devices to avoid determinacy or definiteness, and such inconclusiveness complements and reflects his concept of love.
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2
ID:   092243


Stated desire versus actual practice: reviewing the literature on low fertility rates in contemporary Japanese society / Tanaka-Naji, Hiromi   Journal Article
Tanaka-Naji, Hiromi Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract This article examines the Japanese literature on the current phenomenon of low fertility in Japan, which persists despite the understanding shared by most Japanese that children are valued. By reviewing existing research on low fertility in Japan, the article examines the emergence of low fertility and introduces a new perspective that links the phenomenon to the larger context of social change in Japan. Analysis of the literature reveals that low fertility is paradoxically accompanied by a persistent or enduring desire to have children, as stated by a majority of interviewees. This paradox between desire and behaviour signifies social change that demonstrates both discontinuity and continuity of marriage- and family-related practices and processes in Japanese society.
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