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Good Dogs

Edification, Entertainment, and Kyokutei Bakin's "Nansō Satomi Hakkenden"

Glynne Walley author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cornell University Press

Published:31st May '18

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Good Dogs cover

Good Dogs explores the intersection of didacticism, Chinese vernacular scholarship, social criticism, and commercial storytelling in late Tokugawa Japan through an examination of a masterpiece of 19th century popular fiction: the novel Nansō Satomi Hakkenden(The Lives of the Eight Dogs of the Satomi of Southern Kazusa; for short, Hakkenden), serialized from 1814 to 1842 by Kyokutei Bakin (1767-1848). The author argues that in Bakin's hands, popular fiction functioned to mobilize and hybridize high culture and low, official and heterodox ideologies, and the demands of both the moralist and the marketplace. Good Dogs begin with detailed examinations of Hakkenden as, in turn, a work of gesaku (popular fiction); an adaptation and critique of the Chinese vernacular novel Shuihu zhuan (J. Suikoden, The Water Margin); and an exercise in kanzen choaku, "encouraging virtue and chastising vice." Then it explores how the novel's blend of didacticism and playfulness destabilizes the putatively moral categories of gender, species, and social class, while foregrounding an image of moral agency that prefigures modern individualism. Good Dogs combines close readings of Hakkenden with a consideration of the novel's place in 19th-century Japan (including its Meiji reception), as well as its place in East Asian vernacular fiction.

Walley's book makes an invaluable contribution to the study of Edo-period Japanese literature and culture, and, more specifically, to the understanding of what the yomihon genre is really about.

(Monumenta Nippon

ISBN: 9781939161666

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 1361g

510 pages