Ysko Tawada: Voices from Everywhere is the first volume of criticism dedicated to the work of Ysko Tawada, one of the most highly acclaimed writers of her generation. Douglas Slaymaker has collected a range of essays that explore the plurality of voices and cultures in Tawada's work and push on to explicate the poetics and intellectual underpinnings of her writing. Analyses of her fiction are paired with examinations of its philosophic and aesthetic foundations. This is an essential collection for anyone with an interest in this important young writer.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Part 1 Foreword Part 2 Introduction: Yö koTawada: Voices from Everywhere Part 3 Tawada Yö ko Does Not Exist Part 4 Nation, Transnation, Translation Chapter 5 Translation, Exophony, Omniphony Chapter 6 Missing Heels, Missing Texts, Wounds in the Alphabet Chapter 7 Writing in the Ravine of Language Chapter 8 Yö koTawada's Poetological Reflections on her German Prose Works Part 9 Bodies and Belonging Chapter 10 Tawada's Multilingual Moves: Toward a Transnational Imaginary Chapter 11 Traveling Without Moving: Physical and Linguistic Mobility in Yö ko Tawada's Ü berseezungen Chapter 12 The Unknown Character: Traces of the Surreal in Yö ko Tawada's Writings Part 13 Language Constructions and Identity Production Chapter 14 Words and Roots: The Loss of the Familiar in the Works of Yö ko Tawada Chapter 16 Sign Language: Reading Culture and Identity in "The Gotthard Railway" Chapter 17 Tawada Yö ko's Quest for Exophony: Japan and Germany