In a discussion on some of my reservations on Murakami's take on 20th century Japanese literature, a friend commented on Mishima's Sea of Fertility tetrology with some real insights I thought worth preserving and sharing, albeit anonymously (if you're not into Japanese literature, now's a good time to stop reading):
"My
perspective is different: it was a perfect echo of the end of “Spring
Snow” and a final liberation of the main character from his
self-constructed prison of beliefs. Honda’s life across the novels
represents the false path: of consciousness the inglorious
decay and death of the soul trapped in a repetition of situations that
it cannot fathom being forced into waking. He is forced into being an
observer of his own life eventually debasing himself into a “peeping
Tom” even as he works as a judge. The irony is rich. Honda decays
through the four novels since he clings to the memory of his friend
(Kiyoaki) and does not understand the constructed nature his experience
and desires. He is asleep. He wants Matsugae’s final dream to be the
truth (that they will “...meet again under the Falls.”) His desires have
been leading him in a circle and the final scene in the garden is his
recognition of what the Abbess (Satoko from Spring Snow) was trying to
convey to him. When she tells him, “There was no such person as Kiyoaki
Matsugae”, it is her attempt to cure him of his delusion (and spiritual
illness that has rendered him desperate and weak - chasing the ego
illusions of his youth and seeking the reincarnation of his friend
everywhere.) Honda lives in the dream of his ego and desire. In the
final scene, he wakes up for the first time. I loved the image of the
shadows falling on the garden. He is finally dying, stripped of
illusion. I found it to be Mishima at his most powerful. I agree about
“Sailor”, that is a great novel and much more Japanese in its economy of
expression. Now, Haruki Murakami is a world apart from Kawabata and
Mishima. I love his use of the unconscious/Id as a place to inform and
enthrall: the labyrinth of dreams. Most of his characters are trapped
(at least part of the time) in this “place”: eg Kafka on the Shore,
Windup Bird Chronicle, Hard-boiled Wonderland and End of the World, etc.
Literature has to have room for all of them. I like the other Murakami,
Ryu Murkami, whose “Audition” and “Famous Hits of the Shōwa Era” are
dark, psychotic tales of unrestrained, escalating violence but redeemed
by deep probing of unconscious, hidden motives (the inhuman work of the
unconscious that guides the characters like the Greek sense of fate
(Moira)) and occasional black humor."
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