Abstract

In Ogawa Yōko’s (b. 1962) writing from the late 1980’s and 1990’s, female narrators often revel in the fantastical beauty of youthful masculinities, while they themselves cannot escape the disgusting disorder of feminized domestic spaces. First, I read death and violence in kitchens depicted in the story collection Revenge (1998) to show how Ogawa rewrites this space associated with the housewife and her duties as one of horrific possibilities overturning idealized images of domesticity. Next, building on earlier readings of food, I argue that spectacles of sweetness—cakes, jam, and ice cream desserts—play a particularly crucial role in articulating female desire and violence, such as with the earlier works “Pregnancy Diary” (1991) and Sugar Time (1991). Returning to Revenge, I observe how “sweet” images appear in scenes of violence to outline how female homosocial gazes reflect a constant engagement with femininities seen in other women, particularly those marked by the transgression of anger and murderous desire. I end by considering ways in which Ogawa’s self-reflexive depiction of the woman writer in Revenge playfully problematizes the “mad” fantasies of women who write.

Highlights

  • 552 | Japanese Language and Literature the tablecloth, and works “with precision and conviction, and even a kind of affection...highly rational, with a constant speed that allowed him to get the best results with the least effort; all the economy and elegance of his mathematical proofs performed right there on the ironing board.”[3]

  • To return to the opening of this essay, Ogawa’s 2003 novel Hakase no ai-shita sūshiki seems to provide a completely different vision of everyday life, one that retains a gendering of the everyday but depicts the role of women in domestic spaces with a strikingly different tone

  • Ogawa’s novel borrows the logic of pure mathematics to describe the nature of intimacy gradually accumulating among its three characters; sometimes inexplicable, yet with hidden forms of perfect order, this love arises within the repetition of an ordinary everyday

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Summary

Introduction

552 | Japanese Language and Literature the tablecloth, and works “with precision and conviction, and even a kind of affection...highly rational, with a constant speed that allowed him to get the best results with the least effort; all the economy and elegance of his mathematical proofs performed right there on the ironing board.”[3].

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