Sexuality and Space: Tokyo and Karuizawa in Mariko Koike’s ‘Koi’

This article employs Koike Mariko’s novel Koi [1995] as a case study to explore the functions of urban space in contemporary Japanese fiction. It examines the way that urban space works as an axis upon which the characters in Koi interact, and analyses how those interactions function in direct propo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mina Qiao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Japan Foundation, Sydney 2015-06-01
Series:New Voices in Japanese Studies
Subjects:
Koi
Online Access:http://newvoices.org.au/volume-7/sexuality-and-space-tokyo-and-karuizawa-in-mariko-koikes-koi/
Description
Summary:This article employs Koike Mariko’s novel Koi [1995] as a case study to explore the functions of urban space in contemporary Japanese fiction. It examines the way that urban space works as an axis upon which the characters in Koi interact, and analyses how those interactions function in direct proportion to the nature of the urban space through which they move. This article also analyses the plot paradigm of ‘sexual deviance/transgression during periods of social turbulence’, and identifies the interrelations between sexuality and socio-political factors. The representation of urban space in Koi, together with the socio-political backdrop of the 1970s student movements, is shown to complement the construction and development of the characters’ sexualities, thereby enriching the narrative and supporting Ai Maeda’s claim of urban space’s impact on literature.
ISSN:2205-3166