There goes the neighbourhood: community and family in Miyabe Miyuki's Riyumacr

Author: Seaman A.1

Source: Japan Forum, Volume 16, Number 2, July, 2004 , pp. 271-287(17)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

Key:
Free Content - Free Content
New Content - New Content
Subscribed Content - Subscribed Content
Free Trial Content - Free Trial Content

Abstract:

Miyabe Miyuki, one of Japan's best-known and best-selling writers of detective fiction, has used the genre to critique contemporary Japanese society. In this paper, I examine one of Miyabe's central concerns: the transformation of Tokyo's urban environment and the effect that the development of luxury buildings in a blue-collar neighbourhood has on individual and community identity. In her 1992 novel Kasha, Miyabe chronicled the corrosive effects of consumerism on Japanese society, suggesting that a healthy individual existence depends on membership in close-knit familial units. Her subsequent novel, Riyumacr, shows how the very existence of such communities is threatened by the construction of a luxury high-rise apartment building in the Kita Senju neighbourhood of Tokyo. The family that the detective has created in Kasha stands in stark contrast to the rootless, single young victim and her killer, while in Riyumacr (1997), a family found murdered in a luxury high-rise turns out to comprise four individuals with little connection to one another. Ostensibly a 'true-crime' style of narrative about the murder of a family in the new development, Riyumacr is used by Miyabe to investigate and to meditate on kinship, family, and community, and therefore, serve to map the role of the identity in the formation of self and of place in the increasingly isolated and isolating world of contemporary Japan.

Keywords: Japan; mystery; Miyabe Miyuki; family; consumption; community

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1080/0955580042000222727

Affiliations: 1: University of Massachusetts at Amherst

The full text electronic article is available for purchase. You will be able to download the full text electronic article after payment.

$38.34 plus tax      Refund Policy

 

OR

Back to top

Key:
Free Content - Free Content
New Content - New Content
Subscribed Content - Subscribed Content
Free Trial Content - Free Trial Content
Share this item with others: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
Page Help Click here for Page Help
Shopping cart
Tools
Sign in






Need to register?
Sign up here
Text size: A | A | A | A