What Haruki Murakami talks about when he talks about freedom

October 14, 1:30pm - 3:00pm
Mānoa Campus, Moore Hall 319 (Tokioka Room)

Fallā€™24 51²č¹ŻM Center for Japanese Studies Seminar, co-sponsored with the Department of East Asian Languages & Literatures. Speaker: Chikako Nihei, Ph.D. (Author of Haruki Murakami: Storytelling and Productive Distance (2019)) Discussant: Andre Haag, Ph.D. (Associate Professor of Japanese Literature, EALL) Abstract of talk: The reasons for Haruki Murakamiā€™s world popularity have been a popular topic for academic discussions as well as social media posts by his general readers. His readable Japanese, his unique storytelling style, and the lack of ā€œcultural odorā€ in his stories are surely the keys that have attracted readers both domestically and internationally. On the other hand, many of Murakamiā€™s translators explain that his works became popular when the society experienced big social and/or political change and peopleā€™s fear and anxiety increased. I argue that Murakamiā€™s stories encourage readers to be themselves without losing a control of their mind and life, when social roles and social orders are destabilized. In this talk, I explain how he understands living oneā€™s own life as well as the idea of freedom in the world that is globally becoming a consumerist and information society. The talk will also touch on Murakamiā€™s thorough research about Aum Shinrikyo, the cult group that perpetrated the Tokyo subway sarin gas attack in 1995, a crucial even that made Murakami think deeply about what freedom really is.


Event Sponsor
Center for Japanese Studies, co-sponsored with EALL, Mānoa Campus

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