Erotic desire as a woman’s way of knowing the divine: reading Arishima Taeko, A Certain Woman

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How to Cite: Umetsu Cho, H. . (2021). Erotic desire as a woman’s way of knowing the divine: reading Arishima Taeko, A Certain Woman. Body and Religion, 4(1), 82–104. https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.17910

Full description

This article examines a Japanese novel written by Arishima Takeo, A Certain Woman (first published in Japanese in 1919), in order to explore women’s ways of knowing, focusing on the body and erotic desire as a locus where the human–God relationship is embodied. This novel shows a way of knowing the Divine beyond language and the sanitized notion of love, describing the life of a modern Japanese Christian woman who refuses both Japanese colonial woman-hood and Christian (Victorian) sexual ethics. Depicting the divine presence in the protagonist’s promiscuous and stigmatized body, Arishima asks theological questions about the role of eros and violence in the pursuit of God, and seeks radically free God and humans who may go beyond any existing boundaries.

  • type
    Image
  • created on
  • file format
    jpeg
  • file size
    27 KB
  • container title
    Body and Religion
  • creator
    Haruka Umetsu Cho
  • issn
    ISSN 2057-5831 (Online)
  • issue
    4.1
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield, United Kingdom
  • doi