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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
안영희 (계명대학교)
저널정보
일본어문학회 일본어문학 일본어문학 제83호
발행연도
2018.1
수록면
353 - 373 (21page)

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The writers who used venereal disease-related terms most in Aozora Bunko were naturalist and I-novel writers. On part of infected persons, the venereal disease of syphilis must be associated with the prodigal and dirty image, and evokes shame and humiliation not to mention pains. Iwano Homei’s Self-indulgence (1909) is a naturalist novel as well as an I-novel. This novel depicts relations between the protagonist Tamura Yoshio and syphilis-infected geisha Kikuko. As it is an I-novel, Tamura Yoshio is Iwano Homei himself. At the time, syphilis prevailed very much, which was deeply related to state-controlled prostitutions by the Japanese government in the 1900s. The discourse of syphilis then, however, attributed the cause of its prevalence to demimondaines. This discriminative view was well revealed at Self-indulgence as well. Japan’s modern novels (Meiji, Taisho, Showa) saw continuous appearances of venereal diseases and syphilis. Texts that contained expressions referring to those diseases were mainly those of naturalist and I-novel authors. Literary trend during the Meiji era was naturalism, which mostly depicted the dark inside of protagonists agonizing in a dark room. And from the Taisho era on, the naturalism turned to I-novels, which also depicted the dark private lives of fringe group writers such as alcoholism, adulteries, suicides, and money matters. So reckless sex lives of fringe writers and characters were connected to syphilis.

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