Abstract
AbstractThis article takes up the short work of fictionSalam, written in Japanese in 2006 by Shirin Nezammafi, and deploys it as a primary source in the history of the Japanese present.Salamtells the tale of Layla, an Afghan migrant detained in and then expelled from Japan in 2001. The article argues thatSalamexposes the unmaking of postcolonial Japan: if postcolonial Japan meant a territorial, sovereign nation-state built on hegemonic national myths, then now it is unsustainable.Salamcalls to an inevitable if uncharted post-national, post-territorial future. To advance this argument, the article focuses on Nezammafi's treatment of three humanistic categories tied up with geopolitical territoriality: language, art, and gender. These categories, when associated with the nation-state, generate irony inSalam. That irony stems from the anachronism of nations: territorial nations, Japanese or otherwise, appear as past entities that have outlived their possibility.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Social Sciences,General Arts and Humanities