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Dogra Magra
Often, reviewers will settle for analogues whenever they are unable to devise an explicit explanation for what a particular story contains in its form and content. For example, "Kafkaesque" and "surreal" are often used to denote works in which the inexplicable is occurring, often in ways that seem to indicate a fatalism that underlies complex and often fractured narratives. It is a handy catch-all, as it allows the reviewer to say with a straight face and with some gravitas that "this shit is weird, fo' sure." Yet there are times where such catchphrases are useful shorthands for describing works that defy traditional description. Japanese author Yumeno Kyûsaku's 1935 novel, Dogra Magra, is one of those novels.
B4300001394 | 895.6 KYU d | My Library (Jurusan Sastra Jepang) | Tersedia |
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