Fr. 123.00

Translating Maternal Violence - The Discursive Construction of Maternal Filicide in 1970s Japan

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book provides the first full-length, English-language investigation of the multiple and often contradictory ways in which mothers who kill their children were portrayed in 1970s Japan. It offers a snapshot of a historical and social moment when motherhood was being renegotiated, and maternal violence was disrupting norms of acceptable maternal behaviour. Drawing on a wide range of original archival materials, it explores three discursive sites where the image of the murderous mother assumed a distinctive visibility: media coverage of cases of maternal filicide; the rhetoric of a newly emerging women's liberation movement known as uman ribu; and fictional works by the Japanese writer Takahashi Takako. Using translation as a theoretical tool to decentre the West as the origin of (feminist) theorizations of the maternal, it enables a transnational dialogue for imagining mothers' potential for violence. This thought-provoking work will appeal to scholars of feminist theory, cultural studies and Japanese studies.  

List of contents

Introduction.- Chapter 1.- Filicide in the media: news coverage of mothers who kill in 1970s Japan.- Chapter 2. The Women's Liberation Movement in 1970s Japan.- Chapter 3. Contested meanings: mothers who kill and the rhetoric of uman ribu.- Chapter 4. Filicide and maternal animosity in Takahashi Takako's early fiction.- Conclusion. 

About the author

Alessandro Castellini is LSE Fellow in Transnational Gender Studies at the London School of Economics and Political Science, UK. 

Summary

This book provides the first full-length, English-language investigation of the multiple and often contradictory ways in which mothers who kill their children were portrayed in 1970s Japan. It offers a snapshot of a historical and social moment when motherhood was being renegotiated, and maternal violence was disrupting norms of acceptable maternal behaviour. Drawing on a wide range of original archival materials, it explores three discursive sites where the image of the murderous mother assumed a distinctive visibility: media coverage of cases of maternal filicide; the rhetoric of a newly emerging women’s liberation movement known as ūman ribu; and fictional works by the Japanese writer Takahashi Takako. Using translation as a theoretical tool to decentre the West as the origin of (feminist) theorizations of the maternal, it enables a transnational dialogue for imagining mothers' potential for violence. This thought-provoking work will appeal to scholars of feminist theory, cultural studies and Japanese studies.  




Product details

Authors A. Castellini, Alessandra Castellini, Alessandro Castellini
Publisher Palgrave UK
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 24.01.2017
 
EAN 9781137538819
ISBN 978-1-137-53881-9
No. of pages 292
Series Springer Palgrave Macmillan
Thinking Gender in Transnational Times
Thinking Gender in Transnational Times
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories

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