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  1. 118 総合文化研究科・教養学部
  2. 90 アメリカ太平洋地域研究センター
  3. アメリカ太平洋研究
  4. 2
  1. 0 資料タイプ別
  2. 30 紀要・部局刊行物
  3. アメリカ太平洋研究
  4. 2

こころは踊る : アジア系アメリカ文学と狂気

https://doi.org/10.15083/00037279
https://doi.org/10.15083/00037279
50ff6e6c-6538-4a2c-a400-4b21bca09459
名前 / ファイル ライセンス アクション
atk002005.pdf atk002005.pdf (668.1 kB)
Item type 紀要論文 / Departmental Bulletin Paper(1)
公開日 2010-03-16
タイトル
タイトル こころは踊る : アジア系アメリカ文学と狂気
言語
言語 jpn
資源タイプ
資源 http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
タイプ departmental bulletin paper
ID登録
ID登録 10.15083/00037279
ID登録タイプ JaLC
その他のタイトル
その他のタイトル And the Soul Shall Dance: Wakako Yamauchi and Mad Woman
著者 瀧田, 佳子

× 瀧田, 佳子

WEKO 136382

瀧田, 佳子

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著者別名
識別子Scheme WEKO
識別子 136383
姓名 Takita, Yoshiko
著者所属
著者所属 東京大学
抄録
内容記述タイプ Abstract
内容記述 There seems to be several ""mad women"" in Asian American Literature. The most telling character is Emiko in Wakako Yamauchi's play entitled ""And the Soul Shall Dance"" based on her own short story. In October 2001, Teoriza theater put this play on the stage for the first time in Japan and Yamauchi and director Mako Iwamatsu came to Tokyo. On that occasion The Center for the Pacific and American Studies of the University of Tokyo had a symposium on Asian-American Culture in the United States. Here I would like to rethink her play and focus on Emiko's madness from the comparative point of view of the United States and the Japan she had left behind. As the title of her anthology Songs My Mother Taught Me well illustrates in Yamauchi's literary works, songs play an important part. In this play Emiko sings the Japanese song ""Kokoro ga odoru (And the Soul Shall Dance),"" and it always reminds her of her happier life inthe city of Tokyo in 1920's Red lips Press against the glass Drink the green wine And the soul shall dance She might have been one of those ""moga""(modern girls) who emerged in the Japanese urban streets of Ginza. They loved freer city life and enjoyed dancing and drinking liquor. When she decided to marry a man who was her sister's ex-husband and was living in the United States, she may have dreamed a romantic, western modern life there. But the life in America turned out to be miserable Mr. Oka, her husband, was severely demanding and she suffered beatings. He was jealous of her ex-lover in Japan and they often quarreled violently. In short, to her, the life in the desert of Southern California seemed intolerably patriarchal. Ironically enough, now Emiko's only dream was to leave this country of liberty and come back to old Japan. But this is completely different from most Issei's dream of coming home after they would have succeeded. Oka sent for his daughter from Japan and they began to live together happily and in turn isolating Emiko from the family. As he spent Emiko's money she had saved in order to come back to Japan she lost all hope. By and by she looked at her neighbors with vacant eyes. Her extreme solitude might have driven her mad. Near the end of the play Emiko dances wearing her beautiful kimono and sings ""And The Soul shall dance."" When she sensed Masako's presense, she dropped the branch of sage and went off Masako picked up the branch and looked off to the point where Emiko disappeared. This act of succession shows Wakako Yamaushi's resolve as a Nisei writer to take over Japanese American Women's hardship, agony and sexuality.
書誌情報 アメリカ太平洋研究 = Pacific and American studies

巻 2, p. 35-44, 発行日 2002-03
ISSN
収録物識別子タイプ ISSN
収録物識別子 13462989
書誌レコードID
収録物識別子タイプ NCID
収録物識別子 AA11562201
フォーマット
内容記述タイプ Other
内容記述 application/pdf
日本十進分類法
主題Scheme NDC
主題 312.9
出版者
出版者 東京大学大学院総合文化研究科附属アメリカ太平洋地域研究センター
出版者別名
Center for Pacific and American Studies of The University of Tokyo
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