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Murakami Haruki and the historical memory of East Asia.

Authors :
Baik, Jiwoon
Source :
Inter-Asia Cultural Studies; Mar2010, Vol. 11 Issue 1, p64-72, 9p
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

In this article, I would like to focus on an analysis of internal logic of the 'Haruki phenomenon' as a symptom in current East Asian public culture. In particular, I will discuss how Haruki searches for the healing method for the '60s complex' among Japan's 'Sixties' Kids,' including Haruki himself, through an analysis of his novels Norwegian Wood (2000[1987]) and Kafka on the Shore (2005[2002]). In the process of analysis, we can witness that Haruki abandoned his task of 'reconciliation with the 1960s' through faith, rather than facing it directly, and fiznally stripped the 1960s of historicity and reality. He regarded the 'reconciliation with the 1960s' as something beyond an individual's ability. Transforming the 1960s from a history of postwar Japan into an object of abstract and universal nostalgia, which is closed to the present, Haruki effectively met the latent desire of the East Asian people, who were experiencing the dissolution of their ideologies, at the right time. This is the essence of the Haruki phenomenon that emerged in East Asia over the last decade. I use the phrase 'nostalgia that lost its nationality' to describe the uncanny cultural phenomenon of East Asian readers longing for the 1960s pictured in Haruki's novels as if this were their own past, despite their very different national memories. Nostalgia, a cultural symptom of the postmodern society, where remembering the nation's past totally is impossible, is a blank imitation deprived of its original source. In short, the substance of the Haruki phenomenon is nostalgia that developed from a desire to forget the traumatic memories of the national histories in individual East Asian countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Subjects

Subjects :
COLLECTIVE memory
RECONCILIATION

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14649373
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Inter-Asia Cultural Studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
48644225
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/14649370903403603