Angélica Cabrera Torrecilla
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Ontological ambiguity
Crisis, hyperfiction and social narratives in postmodern Japan
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Through a critical study of postmodernity in Japan, this chapter explores ‘ontological ambiguity’ in relation to hyperfiction. The author demonstrates how in postmodernity conflictual realities derived from fictionalised environments disturb time-space perceptions, critically affecting the construction of social narratives and, therefore, leading to an ambiguous sense of self. The chapter proposes ontological ambiguity as an analytical guide to address Japanese postmodernity as a liminal phase of transition, which circumscribes a context of crisis contradictorily developed between technology and culture, the global and the local, tradition and modernity, and, above all, the fictional and the real. The novel Paprika (1993) by Yasutaka Tsutsui is a good allegorical example of a literary work of anthropological significance. It is shown that literature and anthropology can work together in capturing contemporary uncertainties by exploring questions about society, temporality, place and culture. The chapter aims to focus on scholarly discussion on postmodernity in a non-Western context in order to rethink, in a global sense, its long-term effects.

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