Lovable Losers The Heike in Action and Memory

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Weitere Verfasser: Adolphson, Mikael S. 1961- (HerausgeberIn), Commons, Anne (HerausgeberIn)
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Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Honolulu University of Hawaii Press [2015]
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505 8 |a Drawing on the expertise of scholars in a variety of disciplines, this volume explores the Heike in their own time and their depiction as cultural figures in the centuries that followed. Their portrayal in literature and the arts spans more than eight hundred years and a wide range of genres and media, including nō plays, picture scrolls, early modern comic books, novels, and film. In texts from the sixteenth to twentieth centuries, the Heike serve as catalysts for miracles and vectors for subtle criticisms of the Tokugawa government. Over time Kiyomori became an emblem of postwar democracy and economic progress; today he is a powerful symbol of modern citizens' dissatisfaction with politics.The Heike’s ambiguous moral standing allowed them to be reimagined, reconstructed, and repurposed by different authors in different contexts, as both heroes and villains.  
505 8 |a Rather than assuming their failure, Lovable Losers repositions the Heike within the larger phenomenon of the Genpei War and its aftermath, demonstrating how they took advantage of their station as nobles and warriors. The new research it presents seeks to transcend categorization and blur the lines between different approaches to the Heike to give a well-rounded depiction of a family who has played a defining role in Japanese culture in action, in memory, and somewhere in between 
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Commons, Anne
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contents Lovable Losers is the first substantial piece of English-language scholarship to examine the actions and the memorization of the Heike (Ise Taira), a family of aristocratic warriors whose resounding defeat at the hands of the Seiwa Genji in 1185 resulted in their iconic status as tragic losers. The Tale of the Heike and the many other works derived from it set in place the depiction of the Heike as failed upstart aristocrats whose spectacular downfall was due to neglect of their warrior heritage and the villainy of the family head, Taira no Kiyomori. Lovable Losers aims to contextualize and deconstruct representations of the Heike not only to show how such representations were created in specific contexts in response to specific needs, but also to demonstrate that the representations themselves came to create and sustain a particular kind of culture.
Drawing on the expertise of scholars in a variety of disciplines, this volume explores the Heike in their own time and their depiction as cultural figures in the centuries that followed. Their portrayal in literature and the arts spans more than eight hundred years and a wide range of genres and media, including nō plays, picture scrolls, early modern comic books, novels, and film. In texts from the sixteenth to twentieth centuries, the Heike serve as catalysts for miracles and vectors for subtle criticisms of the Tokugawa government. Over time Kiyomori became an emblem of postwar democracy and economic progress; today he is a powerful symbol of modern citizens' dissatisfaction with politics.The Heike’s ambiguous moral standing allowed them to be reimagined, reconstructed, and repurposed by different authors in different contexts, as both heroes and villains.
Rather than assuming their failure, Lovable Losers repositions the Heike within the larger phenomenon of the Genpei War and its aftermath, demonstrating how they took advantage of their station as nobles and warriors. The new research it presents seeks to transcend categorization and blur the lines between different approaches to the Heike to give a well-rounded depiction of a family who has played a defining role in Japanese culture in action, in memory, and somewhere in between
ctrlnum (ZDB-23-DGG)9780824856908
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dewey-full 952/.01
dewey-hundreds 900 - History & geography
dewey-ones 952 - Japan
dewey-raw 952/.01
dewey-search 952/.01
dewey-sort 3952 11
dewey-tens 950 - History of Asia
discipline Geschichte
era Geschichte gnd
era_facet Geschichte
format Electronic
eBook
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spellingShingle Lovable Losers The Heike in Action and Memory
Lovable Losers is the first substantial piece of English-language scholarship to examine the actions and the memorization of the Heike (Ise Taira), a family of aristocratic warriors whose resounding defeat at the hands of the Seiwa Genji in 1185 resulted in their iconic status as tragic losers. The Tale of the Heike and the many other works derived from it set in place the depiction of the Heike as failed upstart aristocrats whose spectacular downfall was due to neglect of their warrior heritage and the villainy of the family head, Taira no Kiyomori. Lovable Losers aims to contextualize and deconstruct representations of the Heike not only to show how such representations were created in specific contexts in response to specific needs, but also to demonstrate that the representations themselves came to create and sustain a particular kind of culture.
Drawing on the expertise of scholars in a variety of disciplines, this volume explores the Heike in their own time and their depiction as cultural figures in the centuries that followed. Their portrayal in literature and the arts spans more than eight hundred years and a wide range of genres and media, including nō plays, picture scrolls, early modern comic books, novels, and film. In texts from the sixteenth to twentieth centuries, the Heike serve as catalysts for miracles and vectors for subtle criticisms of the Tokugawa government. Over time Kiyomori became an emblem of postwar democracy and economic progress; today he is a powerful symbol of modern citizens' dissatisfaction with politics.The Heike’s ambiguous moral standing allowed them to be reimagined, reconstructed, and repurposed by different authors in different contexts, as both heroes and villains.
Rather than assuming their failure, Lovable Losers repositions the Heike within the larger phenomenon of the Genpei War and its aftermath, demonstrating how they took advantage of their station as nobles and warriors. The new research it presents seeks to transcend categorization and blur the lines between different approaches to the Heike to give a well-rounded depiction of a family who has played a defining role in Japanese culture in action, in memory, and somewhere in between
Taira Familie (DE-588)1018187138 gnd
Heike monogatari (DE-588)4249740-1 gnd
Rezeption (DE-588)4049716-1 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)1018187138
(DE-588)4249740-1
(DE-588)4049716-1
(DE-588)1071861417
title Lovable Losers The Heike in Action and Memory
title_auth Lovable Losers The Heike in Action and Memory
title_exact_search Lovable Losers The Heike in Action and Memory
title_full Lovable Losers The Heike in Action and Memory Anne Commons, Mikael S. Adolphson
title_fullStr Lovable Losers The Heike in Action and Memory Anne Commons, Mikael S. Adolphson
title_full_unstemmed Lovable Losers The Heike in Action and Memory Anne Commons, Mikael S. Adolphson
title_short Lovable Losers
title_sort lovable losers the heike in action and memory
title_sub The Heike in Action and Memory
topic Taira Familie (DE-588)1018187138 gnd
Heike monogatari (DE-588)4249740-1 gnd
Rezeption (DE-588)4049716-1 gnd
topic_facet Taira Familie
Heike monogatari
Rezeption
Konferenzschrift 2011 Banff, Alberta
url https://www.degruyter.com/doi/book/10.21313/9780824856908
work_keys_str_mv AT adolphsonmikaels lovableloserstheheikeinactionandmemory
AT commonsanne lovableloserstheheikeinactionandmemory