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The Great Kanto Earthquake and the Literature of Kawabatayasnari
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관동대지진과 가와바타 야스나리 문학

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Type
Academic journal
Author
Chung Hyangjae (한남대학교)
Journal
FOREIGN STUDIES CENTER 외국학연구 외국학연구 제69호 KCI Accredited Journals
Published
2024.9
Pages
419 - 444 (26page)

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The Great Kanto Earthquake and the Literature of Kawabatayasnari
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The Great Kanto Earthquake occurred in Japan in September 1923. The writer Yasunari Kawabata was hit by an earthquake in Hongo, and immediately after that, he actually looked back on the damaged area. After that, he published "Akutagawa Ryunosuke and Yoshiwara," "Big Fire Spectator," and "Light Moving to the Sky" as related works. Through these works, the bodies that Kawabata saw in person and the situation of survivors are vividly expressed. In particular, “Light Moving to the Sky” is of great significance in the emergence of the idea of 'A former reincarnatio', which is read as the will to transcend death while looking at a large amount of death. “Asakusa kurenaidan” (1929) is created six years after the earthquake, but it can be pointed out that the starting and foundation of its contents lies in the Kanto Great Earthquake. This is because previous earthquake-related works are cited within the novel, or the stories after the novel are intertwined. In that sense, “Asakusa kurenaidan” can be said to be a work that incorporates the comprehensive contents and techniques of earthquake disaster literature.

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