|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Faculty :: Oyler

Elizabeth Oyler
(Ph.D. Stanford University, 1999 )
Assistant Professor EALC:

Medieval Japanese literature and drama

333-9168
eaoyler@uiuc.edu


Elizabeth Oyler specializes in medieval Japanese narrative and performance, with a particular focus on the Heike monogatari (Tales of the Heike) and the genres with which it interacts. She has recently published Swords, Oaths, and Prophetic Visions: Authoring Warrior Rule in Medieval Japan (University of Hawai'i Press, 2006), supported by grants from the Japan Foundation and the ACLS. Her articles include "Gio: Women and Performance in the Heike monogatari" (Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 64:2) and "Daimokutate: Placatory Ritual and the Genpei War" (forthcoming, Oral Tradition). She is currently editing a volume of translations and essays on the Heike and no drama. Her current book project, "Remembering Women: Voice and Performance Modes in Medieval Japanese Narrative and Drama," addresses the idea of "the feminine" in Heike biwa recitation and the no drama. She argues that idealized gender roles are marked not only in portrayals of heroes and heroines, but also in lyrical modes of presentation of both arts: the feminine mode is that of lament, the masculine that of action. The monograph addresses the significance of foregrounding gender in this context, and how it is used to give meaning to both individual works as well as the genres themselves.

http://journal.oraltradition.org (Oral Tradition Journal)

http://www.meijigakuin.ac.jp/~pmjs/ (PMJS: Premodern Japanese Studies)

2090A Foreign Languages Building, 707 S. Mathews, Urbana IL 61801 | 217-244-2725 | Home | UIUC