Post-Nation/Post-Family
Rethinking Modern
Gender Deployment |
| LEE Chong-Hwa |
 |
WORDS |
2 |
| NISHIKAWA Yuko |
|
Introduction |
8 |
| |
 |
Violence,
Nation, and Gender |
|
| UENO Chizuko |
|
Citizenship and Gender : Deconstruction
and reconstruction of the public/private spheres |
10 |
| TAKEMURA Kazuko |
|
Violence, and after
:
Re-reading Sophocles' Thebes Trilogy |
35 |
| YONEYAMA Lisa |
|
The Occupation of Japan from a Critical
Feminist Perspective : Media representation of Japanese women in the
U.S. myth of liberation and rehabilitation |
60 |
| HOSHINO Haruhiko |
|
Nazism and Homosexuality |
85 |
| |
|
Liquidation
of Post-War Discourse |
|
| PARK Yuha |
|
The Realignment of Literature in the
1960s :
The coincidence of the emergences of National Literature
and Resident Korean Literature |
104 |
| HIRATA Yumi |
|
Nation/Family Building and Literary Reception
:
The reading of Resident Koreans Literature in the 1970s |
126 |
| NARITA Ryuichi |
|
Historicizing Repatriation |
149 |
| OGINO Miho |
|
The Reversal of National Population Policy
:
The development and effects of the family planning movement |
175 |
| |
|
Possibilities
in a Post-Family Era |
|
| TATEIWA Shinya |
|
Family, Gender, and Capital :
Revisiting the Paid/Unpaid-Work Discussion |
196 |
| KASUGA Kisuyo |
|
The Problems of Care Work in the Ethicalization
of Dementia Care-Taking |
216 |
| NISHIKAWA Yuko |
|
Opening to a Post-Family Future :
The transformation of the New Town |
237 |