Koichi Haga's study of post-3.11 literature in Japan provides a fascinating and necessary glimpse for western readers into the Japanese experience of ecoprecarity in the wake of one of the most devastating natural-technological disasters in recent memory. While the March 2011 earthquake, tsunami, and subsequent nuclear meltdown received widespread attention, the cultural ramifications and interpretations of these events-and the lessons about nuclear risk that we can learn from this predictable and yet unexpected crisis-have scarcely been contemplated outside of Japan. I find this book to be a valuable contribution to risk criticism and ecocriticism.
-- Scott Slovic, University of IdahoHaga shows how the massive earthquake of 3-11 unleashed not only a calamitous tsunami and the man-made nuclear disaster of Fukushima, it also shook to the foundations the form and content of contemporary Japanese fiction. Based on extensive research, the book is filled with fascinating insights that reveal the complex ways Japanese writers are reimagining what it means to live as humans on our volatile planet.
-- Michael K. Bourdaghs, University of ChicagoAcknowledgments
Introduction: Overview of Post 3.11 Cultural Production
Part I:The Immediate Impact of the 3.11 Disaster on the Writers' Consciousness
Chapter One. Ecological Time-Space Emerging from the Encounter with the 3.11
Earthquake and Tsunami: The first phase of Post 3.11 literary production
Chapter Two. Fissures Opened in Literary Ground: The Great East Japan Earthquake and
Kenzaburo Oe's In Late Style
Chapter Three. Animal Agencies in Post-3.11 Literature
Part II: Acceleration of the Writers' Ecological Consciousness
Chapter Four. Remembrance of Postcolonial Conditions The Earthquake's Disclosure
of Uncommon Ground: Tohoku Area as the Other Within
Chapter Five. Dystopian Novels Flourish in the Post-3.11 Period
Chapter Six. The Emergence of a Planetary Sense Through Geographic Catastrophe
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About the Author