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020 |a 9788869691508 
020 |a 978-88-6969-151-5 
020 |a 9788869691515 
245 0 0 |a Death and Desire in Contemporary Japan  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b Representing, Practicing, Performing 
260 |b Fondazione Università Ca' Foscari  |c 2017 
653 |a Dogen,Selfhood,Death,Unnatural,Haunting,Hijikata Tatsumi,Edgar Morin,Atomic Bomb,Natural,Body,Anti-Dance,Ghosts,Tsukamoto Shin'ya,Company's Founder,Actor Network,Leo Tolstoy,Rokugatsu no hebi,Vladimir Jankélévitch,Witness Literature,Dōjōji,Matsushita Denki,Personhood,Psychoanalysis,Autopsy,Shiseikan,Memory,Mujō,Shiga Naoya,Sociology,Dark Tourism,Butō,Corpse,Salvation,Biyanlu,Cross-Gendered Performance,Plato,Corporeality,Sony,Nagasaki,Desire,Literary Theory,Acephale,Body and Object,Eroticism,Female Desire,Identity Quest,Cinema,Japan,Lacan,Kinosaki nite,Mugen noh,Izutsu,Coroners,Dream,Distance,England,Storytelling,Company-sponsored Funeral,Shibusawa Tatsuhiko,Philosophy of Death,Hiroshima 
041 0 7 |a eng  |2 ISO 639-2 
989 |b DOAB  |a Directory of Open Access Books 
490 0 |a Ca' Foscari Japanese Studies 
500 |a Creative Commons (cc), https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 
028 5 0 |a 10.14277/978-88-6969-151-5 
856 4 0 |u https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/media/pdf/books/978-88-6969-150-8/978-88-6969-150-8.pdf  |7 0  |x Verlag  |3 Volltext 
856 4 2 |u https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/134477  |z DOAB: description of the publication 
082 0 |a 800 
082 0 |a 100 
082 0 |a 300 
520 |a The title of this volume refers to the Buddhist concepts of suffering, impermanence and dependent origination, which link the ideas of Death and Desire. This book stems from a research conducted in the last few years at Ca' Foscari University of Venice, supported by the Japan Foundation. A great deal of work has been done by scholars in various disciplines about dying in Japan, but research has tended to focus on the practices through which death is settled and institutionalised. Yet, what about untamed and unsettled death? What about the cases in which death cannot be successfully coped with by ritual means? What happens if institutions and discourses are not enough to tame it? What about the cases in which unsettled death suddenly intrudes the social? What are the forms it takes and the consequences it has in the social? These are the questions that the volume addresses, by enmeshing representations, practices and performing arts, through contributions that rely on approaches from different disciplines. Each of them analyses one of the multiple and fragmented possibilities in which untamed death can tame the social.