@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00029207, author = {尹, 芷汐 and Yin, Zhixi}, journal = {JunCture : 超域的日本文化研究}, month = {Mar}, note = {Inoue Yasushi's Hyouheki and Matsumoto Seicho's Sonan are two 1950s novels that were influenced by the frequent accidents that occurred during Japan's mountain climbing boom during the same decade. As a sign of Japan's economic upturn, there was a rapid increase in the number of people engaging in mountain climbing in the 1950s. Consequently, mountain climbing became a phenomenon discussed in a variety of discourses found in the mass media and in essays written by alpinists. The differing points-of-view caused a disconnect in these discourses. When a climbing accident happened, it brought on mysteries and those mysteries were perfect material for novel writing. Reading Hyouheki and Sonan as novels that represent the disconnect of climbing discourses between alpinists and media shows how differently Inoue and Matsumoto viewed the climbing boom in Japan as well as their distinct views on the discourses on climbing by media and alpinists. The differences in representations in Hyouheki and Sonan show fundamental differences between Inoue's and Matsumoto's literature., 本稿は、日本学術振興会科学研究費補助金(特別研究員奨励費)による研究成果の一部である。}, pages = {146--156}, title = {松本清張と井上靖の「登山」表象 : 『遭難』と『氷壁』におけるメディアへのまなざし}, volume = {4}, year = {2013} }