Patterns of Shadows: Japanese Crime Gothic as Neo-Gothic Cover Image
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Patterns of Shadows: Japanese Crime Gothic as Neo-Gothic
Patterns of Shadows: Japanese Crime Gothic as Neo-Gothic

Author(s): Katarzyna Ancuta
Subject(s): Studies of Literature
Published by: Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai
Keywords: Japanese Crime Fiction; Japanese Gothic; Ero guro nansensu; Monstrosity; Gothic Aesthetics;

Summary/Abstract: Contemporary Japanese crime writers frequently resort to gothic themes and conventions in their works. This is hardly surprising, since Japanese detective fiction, which dominated Japanese popular literature in the early twentieth century, began as a reaction to nineteenth-century gothic crime stories of writers such as Edgar Allan Poe or Arthur Conan Doyle. This article discusses crime novels of Otsuichi, Natsuo Kirino,and Fuminori Nakamura as examples of Japanese crime gothic, focusing on the Japanese conceptualization of monstrosity in relation to the figure of the criminal, complementarity of the victim and killer characters, and aestheticisation of violence in the context of Japanese aesthetics of impermanence and imperfection.

  • Issue Year: 2018
  • Issue No: 35
  • Page Range: 269-287
  • Page Count: 19
  • Language: English
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