Death of the contemporary self: contextualising suicide in the urban space.
By comparing Haruki Murakami’s Norwegian Wood (1987) and Kim Young-ha’s I Have the Right to Destroy Myself (1996), this paper asserts that both authors express the act of suicide as a cultural response to the new urbanity of the 1960s Japan and 1990s South Korea. The act of suicide in both novels th...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-463922019-12-10T14:42:04Z Death of the contemporary self: contextualising suicide in the urban space. Tan, Puay Shian. School of Humanities and Social Sciences Lee Hyunjung DRNTU::Humanities::Literature By comparing Haruki Murakami’s Norwegian Wood (1987) and Kim Young-ha’s I Have the Right to Destroy Myself (1996), this paper asserts that both authors express the act of suicide as a cultural response to the new urbanity of the 1960s Japan and 1990s South Korea. The act of suicide in both novels thus symbolizes the prevalence of the loss of one’s self and identity in the face of rapid social transformation. With this relationship between urbanization and the contemporary self, this paper will first examine the two authors’ articulation of urban spaces so as to establish the significance of urbanization in the portrayals of suicide, before discussing the parallels between the physical killing of oneself and the death of one’s self and identity. Through the similarities and differences of the two East Asian cultures, this paper aims to make sense of the portrayals of suicide within the urban spaces of Japan and South Korea, and hopes to conclude with the broader implications of these representations of suicide on the individual, the culture and the society. Bachelor of Arts 2011-12-05T08:08:35Z 2011-12-05T08:08:35Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46392 en Nanyang Technological University 30 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Humanities::Literature Tan, Puay Shian. Death of the contemporary self: contextualising suicide in the urban space. |
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By comparing Haruki Murakami’s Norwegian Wood (1987) and Kim Young-ha’s I Have the Right to Destroy Myself (1996), this paper asserts that both authors express the act of suicide as a cultural response to the new urbanity of the 1960s Japan and 1990s South Korea. The act of suicide in both novels thus symbolizes the prevalence of the loss of one’s self and identity in the face of rapid social transformation. With this relationship between urbanization and the contemporary self, this paper will first examine the two authors’ articulation of urban spaces so as to establish the significance of urbanization in the portrayals of suicide, before discussing the parallels between the physical killing of oneself and the death of one’s self and identity. Through the similarities and differences of the two East Asian cultures, this paper aims to make sense of the portrayals of suicide within the urban spaces of Japan and South Korea, and hopes to conclude with the broader implications of these representations of suicide on the individual, the culture and the society. |
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School of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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School of Humanities and Social Sciences Tan, Puay Shian. |
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Final Year Project |
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Tan, Puay Shian. |
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Tan, Puay Shian. |
title |
Death of the contemporary self: contextualising suicide in the urban space. |
title_short |
Death of the contemporary self: contextualising suicide in the urban space. |
title_full |
Death of the contemporary self: contextualising suicide in the urban space. |
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Death of the contemporary self: contextualising suicide in the urban space. |
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Death of the contemporary self: contextualising suicide in the urban space. |
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death of the contemporary self: contextualising suicide in the urban space. |
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2011 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46392 |
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