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Books to Make Space For on the Bookshelf: The Black Lizard

Hirai Tarō (1894-1965) wrote under the name Edogawa Rampo. Having translated Conan Doyle and Edgar Allen Poe he came up with a hero, Akechi Kogorō, fit for a modernising country.

Edogawa Rampo's stories give us a Japanese version of Sherlock Holmes. New Generation Thinker Christopher Harding traces the way detective fiction chimed with the modernising of Japan, when the ability to reason and think problems through logically was celebrated, when cities were changing and other arts mourned a lost rural idyll. In The Black Lizard, the hero Akechi Kogorō plays a cat and mouse game with a female criminal who has kidnapped a businessman's daughter.

Christopher Harding is the author of The Japanese: A History in Twenty Lives and Japan Story: In Search of a Nation, 1850 - the Present (published in the US as A History of Modern Japan: In Search of a Nation, 1850 – the Present). He teaches at the University of Edinburgh.
He is a New Generation Thinker on the scheme run by ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3 and the Arts and Humanities Research Council to select ten academics each year who can use their research to make radio programmes.

You can find him discussing other aspects of Japanese history in the playlist Free Thinking explores Japanese culture /programmes/p0657spq
He presented an Archive on 4 /programmes/b064ww32 and a series about Depression in Japan also for Radio 4 /programmes/b07cv0y4 and a series of 5 Essays for ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3 called Dark Blossoms about Japan's uneasy embrace of modernity /programmes/b0b01kb2

Producer: Ruth Watts

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