Mishima's sword : travels in search of a samurai legend
著者
書誌事項
Mishima's sword : travels in search of a samurai legend
Fourth Estate, 2006
- : hbk.
- : pbk.
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [253]-255)
内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
-
: hbk. ISBN 9780007135080
内容説明
The stunning new book from Christopher Ross, Sunday Times top 10 bestselling author of 'Tunnel Visions'.
On 25 November 1970, after a failed coup d'etat, Japanese writer Yukio Mishima plunged a knife into his tightly muscled belly, and was decapitated using his own antique sword. Mishima's spectacular suicide has been called many things: a hankering for heroism; a beautiful, perverse drama; a political protest against Japan's emasculated post-War constitution; the last act in a theatre of death; the epitaph of a mad genius. But which, if any, is correct? And what happened to Mishima's sword?
Thirty years later Christopher Ross sets off for Tokyo on a journey into the heart of the Mishima Incident. While searching for Mishima's sword and reassessing the life and anachronistic death of this uniquely complex man, he encounters those who knew Mishima, craftsmen and critics, soldiers and swordsmen, boyfriends and biographers - even the man who taught him hara-kiri. The cold trail he follows inspires digressions on, amongst other things, bushido and socks, mutineers and Noh ghosts, nosebleeds and metallurgy - and how to dress for suicide.
Like his best-selling 'Tunnel Visions', Christopher Ross has written another unclassifiable blend of travel writing, autobiography and philosophical quest, an insider's mesmeric account of modern Japan and a death that still haunts the nation.
- 巻冊次
-
: pbk. ISBN 9780007228119
内容説明
"The Quest for Mishima's Sword" is the stunning new book from Christopher Ross, "Sunday Times" top 10 bestselling author of "Tunnel Visions". Yukio Mishima was three times nominated for the Nobel Prize and regarded as Japan's leading contemporary writer. In 1970, he committed ritual suicide by disembowelment and decapitation, his head cut off by a 16th-century sword made by a master smith. He left a wife and two children, and a note on his desk in his study read: 'Human life is limited, but I would like to live forever'. The sword was returned to his family. There is no trace of it now. Christopher Ross will try to find it, while investigating the contradictions of a uniquely complex character. While he goes on his journey, he will reflect - as he did so well in "Tunnel Visions" - on what the sword meant to Mishima and on the questions posed by his extraordinary death. Is a real man a man of action or a man of words? Mishima was also a film director, a composer, and a body-builder who formed his own private militia. He was the first civilian to be allowed to fly in an Airforce jet and circled the globe seven times.
He was happily married and also a homosexual who modelled for bizarre photographs featuring martyrdom and suicide. Four members of his militia helped him to his death. All were dressed in sumptuous dress uniforms. Mishima was beheaded by a 25-year-old who was probably his lover. He had decided to die the death of a Samurai. What is this Samurai code and could it teach us anything today? Christopher Ross will travel around Japan, talking to Mishima's friends and family, critics and political activists, Yakuza gangsters, bosozoku ('speed tribe') bikers, following the writer's traces and visiting places in search of an understanding. "Mishima's Sword" is an unusual philosophical quest; a travel book, but also an account of Ross's interior journey - superimposed on the mind of a man dead for thirty years.
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