Hermann Hesse and Japan Hermann Hesse and Japan
Transnational Cultures

Hermann Hesse and Japan

A Study in Reciprocal Transcultural Reception

    • 64,99 €
    • 64,99 €

Beschreibung des Verlags

Hermann Hesse once stated that his Japanese readers understood him best among all his readers worldwide – a little known fact among readers of Hesse in the West. This book examines Hesse’s reception in Japan and of Japan in the context of a transcultural reception process. It traces the different phases of Hesse’s reception in Japan and contextualises this reception in terms of the regional setting of East Asia and the cultural authority of imperial Japan. The role of transcultural mediators as figurative nodes in the world literature system is analysed, with a particular focus on the key role played by Hesse’s «Japanese» cousin, Wilhelm Gundert. Finally, Hesse’s epistolary exchange with his Japanese readers is unfolded to show how deep affinities arise, which result in the creation of a type of «spiritual» capital. This epistolary exchange, together with the translation of the Zen bible Pi Yen Lu by Wilhelm Gundert, inspired Hesse to write a series of three unique Zen-poems as a means of expressing a lifelong search for transcendence.

GENRE
Belletristik und Literatur
ERSCHIENEN
2021
26. Juli
SPRACHE
EN
Englisch
UMFANG
340
Seiten
VERLAG
Peter Lang
ANBIETERINFO
Lightning Source Inc Ingram DV LLC
GRÖSSE
8,4
 MB
Recoding World Literature Recoding World Literature
2016
Tubercular Capital Tubercular Capital
2018
The Birth and Death of Literary Theory The Birth and Death of Literary Theory
2019
Jewish Primitivism Jewish Primitivism
2021
Ludwig Tieck Ludwig Tieck
2020
Strangers in Berlin Strangers in Berlin
2016