No Sex and the Paradise City. A critical reading of Murata Sayaka’s Shōmetsu sekai 消滅世界 (2015)
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2020
Abstract:
Murata Sayaka is a controversial story writer who questions Japanese current
values of love, sex, and the nuclear family, pivoting on issues like gender and
power. In her novel Shōmetsu sekai (Dwindling World, 2015), she depicts a parallel
Japan where sex has disappeared, and modern birth control technology is used
by the population. Thus, the novel has been labelled as dystopic, and Murata’s
readers think of her literary world as disturbing. In the Shōmetsu sekai scenario,
gender-based social differences disappear for the community wellbeing, and the
new biotechnology is used to improve social conditions. Therefore, should it be
considered simply a dystopian work of fiction? By approaching the text from the
perspective of gender, feminist and posthuman studies, and contextualizing it
within Japanese society and Murata Sayaka’s literary framework, I argue that it
is possible to consider Shōmetsu sekai as an example of utopic feminist (or LGBTQ+)
work of fiction and that the neutralisation of sex as we know it today should be
intended as a means of social improvement.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Murata Sayaka; Japanese Women's Literature; Reproduction Technologies
Elenco autori:
SPECCHIO, Anna
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