Back to Results
First PageMeta Content
Japanese society / Asia / Burakumin / Injustice / Kenji Nakagami / Caste / Kenji / Edo period / Japan / Demographics of Japan / Human rights in Japan


Untraceable Abjection: Nakagami Kenji and the Question of Buraku-min Writing Nakagami Kenji, by his death in 1992 at the premature age of forty-six, had already established himself as one of Japan’s most significant modern writers. In 1976, he won the prestigious
Add to Reading List

Document Date: 2004-10-06 16:46:57


Open Document

File Size: 101,14 KB

Share Result on Facebook

City

Tokyo / Shinguu Shinguu / Goshou / Cambridge / Shinguu / Osaka / Minneapolis / London / Tsuru / New York / /

Company

Gravity’s Capital / Columbia University Press / Stone Bridge Press / MIT Press / Manchester University Press / Pre / Stanford University Press / /

Country

Japan / United States / United Kingdom / /

Currency

USD / JPY / /

Facility

University of Minnesota Press / Suiheisha Museum / /

IndustryTerm

dead animal products / /

NaturalFeature

Hall FALL / /

Organization

Columbia University / Suiheisha / MIT / Stanford University / eta / Department of English and Comparative Literature / Stanford / University of Minnesota Press / /

Person

David Theo Goldberg / Kenji Shiryoushushushitsu / Andrew Rankin / Julia Kristeva / Hall / Prince / Eve Zimmerman / Alan Sheridan / Leon S. Roudiez / Nakagami Kenji Shiryoushushushitsu / Margaret Waller / Etienne Balibar / /

Position

Prince / prominent writer / Professor / first post-war born author / clerk / representative / /

ProvinceOrState

Massachusetts / /

PublishedMedium

the UCI Undergraduate Research Journal / /

SocialTag