La représentation de la censure dans la série romanesque japonaise Library Wars : une lecture à la lueur de Fahrenheit 451

Throughout the 20th century, Dystopian Literature was used as a “laboratory of the worst” (Faye, 1993) by authors engaged against Totalitarism and Censorship. However, Censorship is still ever-present; it has adapted to its postmodern context, assuming new forms. Still, the Dystopian Literature’s to...

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Main Author: Maxime Danesin
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Université de Limoges 2017-06-01
Series:ReS Futurae
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/resf/1006
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author Maxime Danesin
author_facet Maxime Danesin
author_sort Maxime Danesin
collection DOAJ
description Throughout the 20th century, Dystopian Literature was used as a “laboratory of the worst” (Faye, 1993) by authors engaged against Totalitarism and Censorship. However, Censorship is still ever-present; it has adapted to its postmodern context, assuming new forms. Still, the Dystopian Literature’s torch burns vividly in Japan. It has developed a rich production of science fiction, born from a culture mixing between local and foreign elements; it has become inevitable in these times of globalisation. Among contemporary works, Arikawa Hiro’s Library Wars (Toshokan Sensō), drew our attention. This novelistic series of four volumes, published from 2006 to 2007, is staged in a democratic Japan that is being corrupted by a Censorship Law, promulgated for the sake of morality, and where Library Corps try to defend free speech. Multi-genre (dystopian, uchronian, love-comedy), written in a local media form – light novel –, it has been widely successful, earning the author the Seiun Award 2008 – the Japanese equivalent of the Hugo Award. Arikawa’s work surprises with its original approach of the theme of Censorship and the way its story has a strong resonance with Ray Bradbury’s dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451. In this article, we show how Library Wars inherits et continues the theme of Censorship in science-fiction, and thus reconfigures the bradburyian schema according to its own, contemporary and Japanese, context.
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spelling doaj-art-d3be577b951949fb81cd31730b8fe97d2025-01-06T10:42:24ZfraUniversité de LimogesReS Futurae2264-69492017-06-01910.4000/resf.1006La représentation de la censure dans la série romanesque japonaise Library Wars : une lecture à la lueur de Fahrenheit 451Maxime DanesinThroughout the 20th century, Dystopian Literature was used as a “laboratory of the worst” (Faye, 1993) by authors engaged against Totalitarism and Censorship. However, Censorship is still ever-present; it has adapted to its postmodern context, assuming new forms. Still, the Dystopian Literature’s torch burns vividly in Japan. It has developed a rich production of science fiction, born from a culture mixing between local and foreign elements; it has become inevitable in these times of globalisation. Among contemporary works, Arikawa Hiro’s Library Wars (Toshokan Sensō), drew our attention. This novelistic series of four volumes, published from 2006 to 2007, is staged in a democratic Japan that is being corrupted by a Censorship Law, promulgated for the sake of morality, and where Library Corps try to defend free speech. Multi-genre (dystopian, uchronian, love-comedy), written in a local media form – light novel –, it has been widely successful, earning the author the Seiun Award 2008 – the Japanese equivalent of the Hugo Award. Arikawa’s work surprises with its original approach of the theme of Censorship and the way its story has a strong resonance with Ray Bradbury’s dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451. In this article, we show how Library Wars inherits et continues the theme of Censorship in science-fiction, and thus reconfigures the bradburyian schema according to its own, contemporary and Japanese, context.https://journals.openedition.org/resf/1006dystopiaLibrary Warstranstextualitylight novelArikawa (Hiro)Bradbury (Ray)
spellingShingle Maxime Danesin
La représentation de la censure dans la série romanesque japonaise Library Wars : une lecture à la lueur de Fahrenheit 451
ReS Futurae
dystopia
Library Wars
transtextuality
light novel
Arikawa (Hiro)
Bradbury (Ray)
title La représentation de la censure dans la série romanesque japonaise Library Wars : une lecture à la lueur de Fahrenheit 451
title_full La représentation de la censure dans la série romanesque japonaise Library Wars : une lecture à la lueur de Fahrenheit 451
title_fullStr La représentation de la censure dans la série romanesque japonaise Library Wars : une lecture à la lueur de Fahrenheit 451
title_full_unstemmed La représentation de la censure dans la série romanesque japonaise Library Wars : une lecture à la lueur de Fahrenheit 451
title_short La représentation de la censure dans la série romanesque japonaise Library Wars : une lecture à la lueur de Fahrenheit 451
title_sort la representation de la censure dans la serie romanesque japonaise library wars une lecture a la lueur de fahrenheit 451
topic dystopia
Library Wars
transtextuality
light novel
Arikawa (Hiro)
Bradbury (Ray)
url https://journals.openedition.org/resf/1006
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