@article{oai:swu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00007041, author = {山田, 夏樹 and Yamada, Natsuki}, issue = {959}, journal = {学苑, Gakuen}, month = {Sep}, note = {Nireke no Hitobito (The House of Nire) (1964) is set in the years 1918 to 1946. The narrator tells the story chronologically beginning with Kiichiro, the first director of a mental hospital (originally in Matsubara, Setagaya) and then continues to tell the stories of Kiichiro’s successors at the hospital, characters modeled on his grandfather, father, and their relatives. This paper focusses on how the narrator looks at historical changes from the Taisho to the postwar Showa eras. The author argues that the narrator’s “present day” is formed out of the narratives he gives us about the novel’s characters and concludes that the manner in which the novel is narrated exposes the problems of postwar consumer society.}, pages = {(53)--(66)}, title = {北杜夫「楡家の人びと」の戦後―引き継がれる「基一郎の意志」と語り手}, year = {2020}, yomi = {ヤマダ, ナツキ} }