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DB: BASE de DATOS, Biblioteca del Centro Cultural de la Embajada de Japon
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Created: 2011/02/27 01:18:04 JSTLastUpdate:2018/12/16 02:18:32 JST
RUBRO LITERATURA en INGLES
TITULO The Broken Commandment (š)
AUTOR Shimazaki Toson (*)
EDITORIAL University of Tokyo Press
ISBN 0-86008-191-5
IDIOMA INGLES
CODIGO INTERNO NI-0314
NOTA ((*)(trans. by Kenneth Strong) (š)(The humanist intention of LThe Broken CommandmentL is apparent from even a brief summary of its plot. A young schoolteacher, a member of JapanLs despised LetaL, or outcast class, has achieved his present position by concealing his lowly origin, as his father had commanded him, all through his years in school and teachersL college. The tension of having always to keep secret the truth about himself --of living a lie-- increases, till finally friendship with an older fellow outcast, who is fearlessly campaigning against the discrimination under which the eta have suffered for centuries, impels him, in a famous scene, to reveal his origin --to break his fatherLs commandment-- and accept the consequences of his decision to free himself from the burden of his inheritance. Officially, premodern Japanese society was neatly divided into four groups : samurai, peasants, artisans, and merchants, in descending order of respectability. Below these recognized classes were the LhininL, or Lnonpersons,L consisting of Lbeggars, prostitutes, fugitives from justice, itinerant entertainers, mediums, diviners and religious wanderers who had fallen right out of the class system.L Below them, at the very bottom of the scale were the eta. As the name Leta [full of filth]L implies, the members of this group were thought to be genetically impure ; they were confined for the most part to occupations that as the result of a fusion of Shinto and Buddhist ideas had from early times been considered ritually polluting.[from LTranslatorLs IntroductionL])

   

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