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Natsume Soseki's importance to Japanese literature can be compared to that of Dickens to Britain or Henry James to America. Like these writers, his work now holds a hugely popular and important place in the literary imagination of his country. Unlike them, his work is only recently coming to the attention of readers from overseas. "Kokoro" joins the recent publications of "The Gate", "The Tower of London" and "the Three Cornered World" from Peter Owen as part of an international programme to bring one of Japan's best known authors to a new English speaking audience. As Damian Flanagan says in his new critical introduction "Kokoro" is the Soseki novel that has been given most attention by critics and the public in Japan. On one level, a meditation on the changing face of Japanese culture and its attitudes to honour, friendship, love, death, it is also a sly subversion of all of these things. The novel centres around the friendship between the narrator and the man he calls Sensei, who is haunted by mysterious events in his past. As the friendship grows and the narrator gets to know more about the man he so admires he is increasingly intrigued by this hidden history. The Sensei, however, refuses to reveal anything until the third part of the book when the narrator is called away to look after his sick father and the truth is revealed in tragic circumstances, etching itself onto the narrator - and the reader's - "Kokoro" : Heart.
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Previews available in: English Japanese
Subjects
Translations into English, Fiction, Japan, Social conditions, Roman japonais, Traductions anglaises, Fiction, short stories (single author), Near and far eastern fiction (fictional works by one author), Natsume, soseki, 1867-1916, Japanese literature, Fiction, historical, Fiction, psychological, Japan, history, Literature, Fiction, general, Fiction, historical, general, Friendship, History, Friendship--fiction, Pl812.a8 k613 2010, 895.6/342, Teacher-student relationships, Language and languages, Friendship, fiction, Japan, fictionPeople
Sōseki Natsume (1867-1916)Showing 7 featured editions. View all 84 editions?
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Kokoro
Oct 24, 2016, Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
paperback
1539712206 9781539712206
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Also issued online.
Translated from the Japanese.
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Work Description
No collection of Japanese literature is complete without Natsume Soseki's Kokoro, his most famous novel and the last he complete before his death. Published here in the first new translation in more than fifty years, Kokoro--meaning "heart"-is the story of a subtle and poignant friendship between two unnamed characters, a young man and an enigmatic elder whom he calls "Sensei". Haunted by tragic secrets that have cast a long shadow over his life, Sensei slowly opens up to his young disciple, confessing indiscretions from his own student days that have left him reeling with guilt, and revealing, in the seemingly unbridgeable chasm between his moral anguish and his student's struggle to understand it, the profound cultural shift from one generation to the next that characterized Japan in the early twentieth century.
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October 8, 2024 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
July 29, 2024 | Edited by LeadSongDog | Edited without comment. |
July 18, 2024 | Edited by Tom Morris | Merge works |
July 18, 2024 | Edited by Tom Morris | merge authors |
October 27, 2021 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from Internet Archive item record |