Love in the Time of Corona: Heterosexual Romance, Space, and Society in Japanese Fiction on COVID-19

I will examine representations of heterosexual romance in Japanese pandemic fiction published during COVID-19, so as to scrutinize the employment of pandemic in the discussion of social issues and dynamics between the public and private interests. Ueda Takahiro uses the protagonist’s love dilemma to...

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Main Author: Mina Qiao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2021-09-01
Series:Japanese Language and Literature
Online Access:http://jll.pitt.edu/ojs/JLL/article/view/214
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spelling doaj-ec86071fc06e4db79e4b8743a82655b42021-09-27T14:33:39ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghJapanese Language and Literature1536-78272326-45862021-09-0155247149210.5195/jll.2021.214145Love in the Time of Corona: Heterosexual Romance, Space, and Society in Japanese Fiction on COVID-19Mina Qiao0Tokyo University of Foreign StudiesI will examine representations of heterosexual romance in Japanese pandemic fiction published during COVID-19, so as to scrutinize the employment of pandemic in the discussion of social issues and dynamics between the public and private interests. Ueda Takahiro uses the protagonist’s love dilemma to question the postmodern condition, where the digital attempts to replace everything, disturb the master narratives, and transform our society. Tsukui Itsuki’s story has a rather optimistic view of technological responses to the pandemic. In his work, the protagonist’s romantic pursuit realizes individual development as well as civil society building. Kanehara Hitomi incorporates the element of pandemic in the representations of anti-sociability and precarity of youths in post-bubble Japan. Furthermore, the element of pandemic enriches the depictions of anxieties and issues of contemporary Japanese society from before the emergence of COVID-19: techno-induced postmodern crisis, ideological disputes, and socio-economic stagnation.    Keywords: COVID-19, pandemic, heterosexuality, reproduction, space, science fiction, Kanehara Hitomihttp://jll.pitt.edu/ojs/JLL/article/view/214
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mina Qiao
spellingShingle Mina Qiao
Love in the Time of Corona: Heterosexual Romance, Space, and Society in Japanese Fiction on COVID-19
Japanese Language and Literature
author_facet Mina Qiao
author_sort Mina Qiao
title Love in the Time of Corona: Heterosexual Romance, Space, and Society in Japanese Fiction on COVID-19
title_short Love in the Time of Corona: Heterosexual Romance, Space, and Society in Japanese Fiction on COVID-19
title_full Love in the Time of Corona: Heterosexual Romance, Space, and Society in Japanese Fiction on COVID-19
title_fullStr Love in the Time of Corona: Heterosexual Romance, Space, and Society in Japanese Fiction on COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Love in the Time of Corona: Heterosexual Romance, Space, and Society in Japanese Fiction on COVID-19
title_sort love in the time of corona: heterosexual romance, space, and society in japanese fiction on covid-19
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
series Japanese Language and Literature
issn 1536-7827
2326-4586
publishDate 2021-09-01
description I will examine representations of heterosexual romance in Japanese pandemic fiction published during COVID-19, so as to scrutinize the employment of pandemic in the discussion of social issues and dynamics between the public and private interests. Ueda Takahiro uses the protagonist’s love dilemma to question the postmodern condition, where the digital attempts to replace everything, disturb the master narratives, and transform our society. Tsukui Itsuki’s story has a rather optimistic view of technological responses to the pandemic. In his work, the protagonist’s romantic pursuit realizes individual development as well as civil society building. Kanehara Hitomi incorporates the element of pandemic in the representations of anti-sociability and precarity of youths in post-bubble Japan. Furthermore, the element of pandemic enriches the depictions of anxieties and issues of contemporary Japanese society from before the emergence of COVID-19: techno-induced postmodern crisis, ideological disputes, and socio-economic stagnation.    Keywords: COVID-19, pandemic, heterosexuality, reproduction, space, science fiction, Kanehara Hitomi
url http://jll.pitt.edu/ojs/JLL/article/view/214
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