Based originally on issues from this thread but wanting to avoid arguments related therein and just focus on analyses of primary sources...
I'm curious about works on the stylistics of using kanji/kana in fiction, poetry, etc... I don't know what keywords to select when searching, so if you know of any good books and papers and the like, feel free to mention them? Something to tide me over till my Japanese-fu is strong.
Examples, from here: "Kanji compounds can be given arbitrary readings for stylistic purposes. For example, in Natsume Sōseki's short story The Fifth Night, the author uses 接続って for tsunagatte, the gerundive -te form of the verb tsunagaru ("to connect"), which would usually be written as 繋がって or つながって. The word 接続, meaning "connection", is normally pronounced setsuzoku."
Or On the Stylistic Function of Japanese Script [pdf] (Mayevski uses the terms 'graphostylistics' and 'orthographic stylistics' but I don't think they took off, as searches didn't turn anything up. ;p)
Or Orthographic puns: The case of Japanese kyoka
(Or related to the above: Robin D. Gill's works... )
I'm curious about works on the stylistics of using kanji/kana in fiction, poetry, etc... I don't know what keywords to select when searching, so if you know of any good books and papers and the like, feel free to mention them? Something to tide me over till my Japanese-fu is strong.
Examples, from here: "Kanji compounds can be given arbitrary readings for stylistic purposes. For example, in Natsume Sōseki's short story The Fifth Night, the author uses 接続って for tsunagatte, the gerundive -te form of the verb tsunagaru ("to connect"), which would usually be written as 繋がって or つながって. The word 接続, meaning "connection", is normally pronounced setsuzoku."
Or On the Stylistic Function of Japanese Script [pdf] (Mayevski uses the terms 'graphostylistics' and 'orthographic stylistics' but I don't think they took off, as searches didn't turn anything up. ;p)
Or Orthographic puns: The case of Japanese kyoka
(Or related to the above: Robin D. Gill's works... )
Edited: 2010-03-18, 5:53 pm
