"Origins of Modern Japanese Literature" is a radical reexamination of how Japanese literature developed after the 1868 Meiji Restoration. It's made up of a series of essays by Karatani Kojin that were originally published in the late '70s, a time when new critiques of modernity were gathering steam in Japan. Karatani's main argument is that modern literary themes such as "the landscape" and "childhood" are not timeless, culturally neutral concepts that the modernists happened to take an interest in, but products of modernism themselves, with specific and intelligible histories. These histories, however, are suppressed by the same "inversions" (as Karatani puts it) that bring the themes into being: "In the very moment when we become capable of perceiving landscape, it appears to us as if it had been there, outside of us from the start."