dali48 and studying and playing chess and stopping smoking in the 70s...
13.12.2007 - Interpretation von dali48
Although gaining the status of highly influential political writer, Oe never joined any political party... - In his early novels Oe explored the nature of antisocial violence as well as perverse sexuality, as in his 1958 novella Memushiri Kouci - Themes of madness appear in his works as metaphors for the human condition, among them Hiroshima nooto (1964), an essay about the public madness of nuclear warfare - It was a sustained attack on the famous writer Mishima Yukio, who attempted a right-wing coup in 1970 and subsequently committed suicide by seppuku - The novella also criticizes the emperor system, and warns of the dangers of fanatical beliefs - Although Oe is considered by many the finest writer in Japan today, his social criticism has been rejected - His lifelong ambivalence regarding the 'father image' is rooted in his prewar ideological indoctrination centered on the divine Emperor who neither saw, heard, nor spoke to his loyal subjects - From 1931 onward, Japan pursued totalitarism and military expansionism in the name of the Emperor - Although no less patriotic than his class-mates, Oe was so traumatized by this forced ritual that he often could not utter a word, inviting severe beatings from his teacher... (Kenzaburo Oe)
Annex2 to the blogs of dali48 |
05.10.2015 - Autoreninterview.doc - docs.google.com/document/d/17R… see dali48 on Google,Blogspot,Bod.de,StumbleUpon,Pinterest,Twitter,Goodreads...
amazon.com/author/dali48
09/22/2011 - Interview with Author dali48 on Google +
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