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Happiness Foreclosed: Sentimentalism, the Suffering Heroine, and Social Critique in Higuchi Ichiyo's "Jusan'ya"
- Timothy J. van Compernolle
- The Journal of Japanese Studies
- Society for Japanese Studies
- Volume 30, Number 2, Summer 2004
- pp. 353-381
- 10.1353/jjs.2004.0078
- Article
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Sentimentalism is often viewed as a conservative mode of literary imagination, whereby an author occludes social problems with tears. I demonstrate that at least in the case of Higuchi Ichiyo's "Jusan'ya" (Thirteenth night, 1895), the story of a woman who is persuaded by her family not to divorce her husband, sentimentalism can be read differently. In this essay, I make use of historicist reading strategies in order to show how a classical rhetoric pressed into the service of sentimentality is dialogically engaged with an emergent ideology of the bourgeois nuclear family and how the text can be read as a concerted critique of that ideology.
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ISSN | 1549-4721 |
---|---|
Print ISSN | 0095-6848 |
Pages | pp. 353-381 |
Launched on MUSE | 2004-07-30 |
Open Access | No |
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