Written in eight days, in December 1905, and published in the January
1906 issue of the magazine Teikoku Bungaku (Imperial Literature),
Shumi no iden (_The Heredity of Taste_) is Soseki Natsume's only
anti-war work. Chronicling the mourning process of a narrator haunted
by his friend's death, the story reveals Soseki's attitude to the
atrocity of war, specifically to the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-5, and
to the personal tragedies and loss of individuality of young men like
his hero Ko-san, and the sacrifices made by both the living and the
dead.
Although the first part of the story powerfully describes the
narrator's visions of the war dead, including the recurring vision of
Ko-san who cannot climb out of a ditch and return from the war, it is
the second half, in which a beautiful and mysterious woman appears
before the narrator at Ko-san's grave, with the promise of
transcendence, that grips our attention.
The story centers on finding out the identity of this woman and her
relationship with Ko-san, with it's implication that what should have
been a love story has been shattered by the reality of war-a reminder
of the magnitude of Japan's sacrifice for it's so-called victory.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781462904747
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Vendor
Tuttle Publishing
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter