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DB: BASE de DATOS, Biblioteca del Centro Cultural de la Embajada de Japon
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Created: 2010/11/29 00:08:38 JSTLastUpdate:2021/03/04 00:38:10 JST
RUBRO LITERATURA en INGLES
TITULO Soundings In Time (The Fictive Art of Yasunari Kawabata) (š)
AUTOR Roy Starrs
EDITORIAL Japan Library
ISBN 1-873410-74-3
IDIOMA INGLES
CODIGO INTERNO NI-0249
NOTA (š)(Remarkably, this is the first full-length study of Kawabata, JapanLs first Nobel laureate for literature. It is also the third and final volume of Roy StarrsL trilogy looking in depth at three of JapanLs top twentieth-century authors. (1.LDeadly DialecticsL, Sex, Violence and Nihilism in the World of Yukio Mishima, 2.LAn Artless ArtL, The Zen Aesthetic of Shiga Naoya)^@Kawabata is most widely known as the author of LSnow Country (1948)L and LThe Sound of the Mountain (1954)L --the latter being the culminating masterpiece of the authorLs controversial career, and one of the great novels of twentieth-century world literature. Other key representative works analysed in this study are LCrystal Fantasies, LThousand CranesL, LThe Master of GoL and LSleeping BeautiesL.)^@([from LINTRODUCTIONL]@I have chosen to concentrate in more depth on a few representative works from each stage of the five decades of his active career, from the 1920s to the 1960s. With only one or two exceptions, the works I have singled out are rather obvious choices, those generally regarded as his most significant LseriousL works of literature. To some extent Kawabata himself makes these choices easy : though prolific, much of the fiction he wrote was Lsub-literaryL, intended as Lthrow-awayL popular entertainment for womenLs magazines --a kind of writing for which, to the benefit of his pocket-book if not his reputation, he seems to have possessed a great facility.^@I divide his career into five major stages. From about 1914 to 1925 was a period of Lself-discoveryL during which Kawabata, like many writers before him, grew to self-awareness as both a man and an artist through the writing of autobiographical sketches and stories.^@The period culminated in his first masterpiece, LThe Dancing Girl of IzuL, which firmly established his position as an important up-and-coming writer, and was in this sense his real Ldebut workL. From about the mid-1920s to the mid-1930s was a period of Lexperiment and expansionL, during which, under the influence of the European modernism which, by a fortunate coincidence, was flourishing exactly at that time, the young writer ventured far beyond the traditional style and themes of his early LlyricalL writings.^@Although the creative products of this period were of varying success, Kawabata grew enormously as an artist through these experiences and learned much that would prove of lasting value to him.^@Thus, during his next phase, from the mid-1930s to the mid-1940s, which I would describe as that of his Learly maturityL, he was able to return to a style that was to some extent traditional but considerably enriched by what he had learned from his Lmodernist experimentsL. The representative work of this period is, of course, his first great Lhaiku novelL, LSnow CountryL.^@The fourth phase of KawabataLs career, resumed after the brief hiatus in his writing caused by the Pacific War, consists of the great flowering of his art which occurred in the immediate postwar period. This may be described as his period of Llate maturityL, in which his haiku novel achieved a new level ofsignificance and perfection with LThe Sound of the MountainL. The works of this period are pervaded by a mood of gentle, elegiac melancholy, something like the Lmono no awareL pathos of traditional Japanese literature, and this may be read as a response to both a historical and a personal situation : on the one hand, JapanLs defeat and the threat this seemed to pose to the native cultural tradition and, on the other, KawabataLs own sense of the incipient encroachment of old age.^@The fifth and final stage, which could perhaps be described as that of his Lpost-maturityL, was in several senses a period of decline : from the late 1950s onwards Kawabata wrote relatively little and the deterioration in his physical and psychological health led ultimately to his tragic suicide in 1972. But this period of his LdecadenceL was nonetheless marked by an appropriately dark florescence, in the form of two remarkable Lflowers of evilL, LSleeping BeautiesL and LOne ArmL. These two studies in the dehumanization of sex at the service of male narcissism are as masterful in their style and fictional technique as anything Kawabata ever wrote.^@Finally, although one must take account of the negative and, for any reader, potentially depressing aspects of KawabataLs work, one should also acknowledge that his work ultimately triumphs over all of these --not by any facile Lhappy endingL nor by any explicit statement of an optimistic philosophy but, as great writing should, by the power and beauty of its language. There is a quiet, meditative, poetic quality to KawabataLs language which speaks more eloquently of a victory of the spirit over suffering and of a serene joy in life than any explicit statement could do.^@¥CONTENTS^@œ1.An Orphan Psychology@œ2.An Ambiguous Redemption@œ3.Experiment and Expansion@œ4.Between Tradition and Modernity@œ5.Elegies for A Dying Tradition@œ6.Time and Anti-time@œ7.Narcissus in Winter^)

   

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