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OverviewA fresh take on the dopplegnger and its place in Japanese film and literature-past and present Since its earliest known use in German Romanticism in the late 1700s, the word Doppelgnger (double-walker) can be found throughout a vast array of literature, culture, and media. This motif of doubling can also be seen traversing historical and cultural boundaries. Double Visions, Double Fictions analyzes the myriad manifestations of the doppelgnger in Japanese literary and cinematic texts at two historical junctures: the interwar period of the 1920s and 1930s and the present day. According to author Baryon Tensor Posadas, the doppelgnger marks the intersection of the historical impact of psychoanalytic theory, the genre of detective fiction in Japan, early Japanese cinema, and the cultural production of Japanese colonialism. He examines the doppelgnger's appearance in the works of Edogawa Rampo, Tanizaki Jun'ichiro, and Akutagawa Ryunosuke, as well as the films of Tsukamoto Shin'ya and Kurosawa Kiyoshi, not only as a recurrent motif but also as a critical practice of concepts. Following these explorations, Posadas asks: What were the social, political, and material conditions that mobilized the desire for the doppelgnger? And how does the dopplegnger capture social transformations taking place at these historical moments? Double Visions, Double Fictions ultimately reveals how the doppelgnger motif provides a fascinating new backdrop for understanding the enmeshment of past and present. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Baryon Tensor PosadasPublisher: University of Minnesota Press Imprint: University of Minnesota Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 21.60cm ISBN: 9781517902629ISBN 10: 1517902622 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 28 February 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , General/trade , Professional & Vocational , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsContents Introduction. A Strange Mirror: The Doppelgänger in Japan 1. Stalkers and Crime Scenes: The Detective Fiction of Edogawa Rampo 2. Repressing the Colonial Unconscious: Racialized Doppelgängers 3. Projections of Shadow: Visual Modernization and Psychoanalysis 4. Rampo’s Repetitions: Confession, Adaptation, and the Historical Unconscious 5. Compulsions to Repeat: The Doppelgänger at the End of History Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsDouble Visions, Double Fictions is a truly fresh contribution to Japanese literary and film studies by way of an ingenious examination of the doppelganger. For Baryon Tensor Posadas, the doppelganger functions not merely as a crafty aesthetic device, but as an actual conceptual practice mobilized by some of Japan's most important modern writers and filmmakers. --Eric Cazdyn, University of Toronto In Double Visions, Double Fictions, Baryon Tensor Posadas carefully traces the appearance and proliferation of the doppelganger in Japan across various cultural and intellectual domains, including literature, cinema, and psychoanalysis. In his masterful analysis, the doppelganger is not merely one figure among others, but rather, in its destabilizing effect on concepts of origin and imitation, one that highlights the core conflicts underlying modernity in Japan, including its fraught relation to the West and its emergence as a colonial power. --Seiji Lippit, author of Topographies of Japanese Modernism The doppelganger haunts, not only as a double but also through its multiple iterations. Approaching this uncanny figure as a form of a genre, Double Visions, Double Fictions takes us on an exciting intellectual adventure, tracing its recursions through various media forms and a broad span of historical periods in modern and contemporary Japan. --Tomiko Yoda, Harvard University Double Visions, Double Fictions is a truly fresh contribution to Japanese literary and film studies by way of an ingenious examination of the doppelganger. For Baryon Tensor Posadas, the doppelganger functions not merely as a crafty aesthetic device, but as an actual conceptual practice mobilized by some of Japan's most important modern writers and filmmakers. -Eric Cazdyn, University of Toronto In Double Visions, Double Fictions, Baryon Tensor Posadas carefully traces the appearance and proliferation of the doppelganger in Japan across various cultural and intellectual domains, including literature, cinema, and psychoanalysis. In his masterful analysis, the doppelganger is not merely one figure among others, but rather, in its destabilizing effect on concepts of origin and imitation, one that highlights the core conflicts underlying modernity in Japan, including its fraught relation to the West and its emergence as a colonial power. -Seiji Lippit, author of Topographies of Japanese Modernism The doppelganger haunts, not only as a double but also through its multiple iterations. Approaching this uncanny figure as a form of a genre, Double Visions, Double Fictions takes us on an exciting intellectual adventure, tracing its recursions through various media forms and a broad span of historical periods in modern and contemporary Japan. -Tomiko Yoda, Harvard University Double Visions, Double Fictions is a brilliantly written piece that sheds light on the impression the doppelganger motif had on Japan's film and political culture in the early twentieth century. -Film Matters Double Visions, Double Fictions is a truly fresh contribution to Japanese literary and film studies by way of an ingenious examination of the doppelganger. For Baryon Tensor Posadas, the doppelganger functions not merely as a crafty aesthetic device, but as an actual conceptual practice mobilized by some of Japan's most important modern writers and filmmakers. --Eric Cazdyn, University of Toronto In Double Visions, Double Fictions, Baryon Tensor Posadas carefully traces the appearance and proliferation of the doppelganger in Japan across various cultural and intellectual domains, including literature, cinema, and psychoanalysis. In his masterful analysis, the doppelganger is not merely one figure among others, but rather, in its destabilizing effect on concepts of origin and imitation, one that highlights the core conflicts underlying modernity in Japan, including its fraught relation to the West and its emergence as a colonial power. --Seiji Lippit, author of Topographies of Japanese Modernism The doppelganger haunts, not only as a double but also through its multiple iterations. Approaching this uncanny figure as a form of a genre, Double Visions, Double Fictions takes us on an exciting intellectual adventure, tracing its recursions through various media forms and a broad span of historical periods in modern and contemporary Japan. --Tomiko Yoda, Harvard University Double Visions, Double Fictions is a truly fresh contribution to Japanese literary and film studies by way of an ingenious examination of the doppelg�nger. For Baryon Tensor Posadas, the doppelg�nger functions not merely as a crafty aesthetic device, but as an actual conceptual practice mobilized by some of Japan's most important modern writers and filmmakers. --Eric Cazdyn, University of Toronto In Double Visions, Double Fictions, Baryon Tensor Posadas carefully traces the appearance and proliferation of the doppelg�nger in Japan across various cultural and intellectual domains, including literature, cinema, and psychoanalysis. In his masterful analysis, the doppelg�nger is not merely one figure among others, but rather, in its destabilizing effect on concepts of origin and imitation, one that highlights the core conflicts underlying modernity in Japan, including its fraught relation to the West and its emergence as a colonial power. --Seiji Lippit, author of Topographies of Japanese Modernism The doppelg�nger haunts, not only as a double but also through its multiple iterations. Approaching this uncanny figure as a form of a genre, Double Visions, Double Fictions takes us on an exciting intellectual adventure, tracing its recursions through various media forms and a broad span of historical periods in modern and contemporary Japan. --Tomiko Yoda, Harvard University Author InformationBaryon Tensor Posadas is assistant professor of Asian languages and literatures at the University of Minnesota and translator of The Sacred Era by Yoshio Aramaki (Minnesota, 2017). 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