TOKYO

Fiction & Literature, Literary
Cover of the book TOKYO by Michael Mejia, University of Alabama Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Michael Mejia ISBN: 9781573668774
Publisher: University of Alabama Press Publication: March 6, 2018
Imprint: Fiction Collective 2 Language: English
Author: Michael Mejia
ISBN: 9781573668774
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Publication: March 6, 2018
Imprint: Fiction Collective 2
Language: English

A novel in three parts, linked by a single narrative of disaster, loss, and longing.

TOKYO is an incisive, shape-shifting tour de force, a genre-bending mix of lyric prose, science fiction, horror, and visual collage exploring the erotic undercurrents of American perceptions of Japanese culture and identity.

By turns noir, surreal, and clinical in its language and style, TOKYO employs metaphors of consumption, disease, theater, gender fluidity, monstrousness, and ecological disaster in intertwined accounts touching on matters of cultural appropriation, fiction's powerful capacity to produce immersive realities, and the culturally corrupting late capitalist excesses that entangle both the United States and Japan.

The novel opens with a fantastic, slyly comic report written by a Japanese executive, describing the anomalous bluefin tuna his company purchased at Tokyo’s iconic fish market, as well as the dissolution of the executive’s marriage to his Japanese-American, or Sansei, wife. But when an American writer—whose own Sansei wife was previously married to a Japanese executive—begins investigating the report’s author and his claims, assisted by a mysterious Japanese correspondent the American suspects may once have been his wife’s lover, identities begin to scramble until it’s uncertain who is imagining who, and who is and isn’t Japanese. Meanwhile, a secret plot to establish pure Japaneseness through the global distribution of genetically engineered bluefin tuna seems to be rushing toward its conclusion like a great wave.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

A novel in three parts, linked by a single narrative of disaster, loss, and longing.

TOKYO is an incisive, shape-shifting tour de force, a genre-bending mix of lyric prose, science fiction, horror, and visual collage exploring the erotic undercurrents of American perceptions of Japanese culture and identity.

By turns noir, surreal, and clinical in its language and style, TOKYO employs metaphors of consumption, disease, theater, gender fluidity, monstrousness, and ecological disaster in intertwined accounts touching on matters of cultural appropriation, fiction's powerful capacity to produce immersive realities, and the culturally corrupting late capitalist excesses that entangle both the United States and Japan.

The novel opens with a fantastic, slyly comic report written by a Japanese executive, describing the anomalous bluefin tuna his company purchased at Tokyo’s iconic fish market, as well as the dissolution of the executive’s marriage to his Japanese-American, or Sansei, wife. But when an American writer—whose own Sansei wife was previously married to a Japanese executive—begins investigating the report’s author and his claims, assisted by a mysterious Japanese correspondent the American suspects may once have been his wife’s lover, identities begin to scramble until it’s uncertain who is imagining who, and who is and isn’t Japanese. Meanwhile, a secret plot to establish pure Japaneseness through the global distribution of genetically engineered bluefin tuna seems to be rushing toward its conclusion like a great wave.

More books from University of Alabama Press

Cover of the book Beautiful Soon Enough by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book Natural Wonders by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book The Creek War of 1813 and 1814 by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book The Archaeology of Town Creek by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book Life and Death in the Ancient City of Teotihuacan by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book Eagle Days by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book Exploring Federalism by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book The Darkness of the Present by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book Blue Studios by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book The Slaves Who Defeated Napoleon by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book Mormons and Cowboys, Moonshiners and Klansman by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book Tennesseans at War, 1812–1815 by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book More than a Game by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book Abductive Reasoning by Michael Mejia
Cover of the book At Ease in Zion by Michael Mejia
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy