Monday, May 6, 2019

Roshomon and Other Stories by Ryūnosuke Akutagawa


This is one of my all time favorite Renaissance songs:  

Germanic Lombardy song, L'Amor Dona Ch'lo Te Porto



There seems to be two camps concerning Kindles.  Those that use them and those that wouldn't touch them with a ten foot pole.  I must admit when they first came out I was appalled.  The thought of reading one of my glorious books on an electronic device was unthinkable.

Of course I'm conservative about everything.  I only wear clothes as they're going out of style; they're much cheaper that way, for one thing.  They're no longer popular for another.  I hate belonging to a herd.  Maybe I'm arrogant.

But we were speaking of Kindles.  I had always brought my Kindle on overseas trips because it's so much lighter than carrying a suitcase load of books.  There are also a lot of free downloads, which is nice.

Lately I've discovering a couple of other perks about my Kindle.  One, gratification is immediate.  I click on the buy link and voila!  The book is in my house.  Secondly,  I don't have to worry about what condition it will be in we it arrives.  I have had a few bad experiences with that.  Some seller's idea of "good" or "like new" condition do not match my own.

Finally, they are considerably cheaper.  I could have bought the complete British Pack of Mystery writers for about a hundred dollars.  Instead I got the complete set for $15.00 or .99 cents each.

Which is why I bought the following book for my Kindle.  It was only $1.99.  I got it immediately and wrote a review before it would have ever been delivered to my door.

I have 437 books on my Kindle.  I could travel around the world comfortably.  Just need to remember the outlet adapter.




Rashomon and Other Stories (Tuttle Classics)Rashomon and Other Stories by Ryūnosuke Akutagawa
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Collection of short stories by the pre-war Japanese author, Ryunosuke Akutagawa. Akutagawa wrote around 150 short stories before he committed suicide in 1927.

The stories are creepy and eerie, but very well done. Perhaps they are even more beautiful in the original Japanese. Nevertheless, there is something dismal and Sartresque about them. Another descriptive word would be thought-provoking as each tale grapples with evil and the hopelessness of man.

Though the author is from the 20th century, the tales show an medieval, traditional Japan. Maybe Akutagawa saw that this way of life was on the verge of disappearing.

These perhaps were meant to be moral tales, hoping to provoke the readers into recognizing their own guilt and lack of compassion for their fellow man, much like the Indian writer and poet, Rabindranath Tagore.

The first one is probably the most interesting to me. In A Grove, is about a murder with no third person narrator, but several first person narrators. The entire story is through dialogue. Each gives their testimony as to what happened. As each new person gives their version of events, new information is added and enlightens the reader to the actual character of the previous witness. Finally, even the victim gives his testimony through a medium.

Spoiler:

Another dark yet provoking tale is Rashomon. A recently fired servant visits a place where unclaimed corpses are dumped. While there he discovers a old woman stealing the hair from the corpses to sell.

He is angry that someone would stoop to desecrating the dead, but the woman insists she must do so to survive. She then claims the dead woman whose hair she is stealing stole fish when she was alive, but she, too, did it only to survive. So is it evil when one is only doing what one is forced to do?

The servant answers her, that if that is the case, he is justified in stealing from her. So he violently takes her clothes from her body and runs off, leaving the old woman naked among the dead.

I think it is a point well taken. When one begins to justify evil, where is the line drawn? It's just a matter of might making right.

The last story, The Dragon, is the most suspenseful. A priest, tired of being mocked and bullied by his community decides to play a practical joke. He sets up a sign next to a lake near his temple that at a certain date, a black dragon that resides at the bottom of the lake will rise to the heavens.

As more and more people read the sign, word gets around and increasing hordes of people from all over Japan start arriving to see the spectacle. The priest begins to feel uneasy. He meant it as a joke so he could laugh at his fellow villagers. Now what will happen when everyone is disappointed?

The ending is not predictable and rather beautiful.


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12 comments:

Brian Joseph said...

Great commentary on these stories Sharon. I like moody and philosophical works like these sound like. In addition I really loved the film Rashomon, which I understand is based upon a combination of these stories.

have come to love the Kindle for all the reasons that you mention. I also love the ability to highlight, cut and paste passages and take notes. Finally, as my eyesight is not what it was. I appreciate the ability to make fonts bigger.

Have a great day.

mudpuddle said...

wild syncopation! i used to love playing the sopranino recorder; the bassoon and recorder combo was terrific! two years ago i ranted against the ereader thing... now i've got four of them with hundreds of downloads from gutenberg, mostly... well, three: i managed to destroy one by forgetting to eject the setting part; it was a sony prs 350 that i got for 20$; i actually liked the way it worked better than Kindle... the one i use most is a german trekstor; it was pretty expensive, but it does indeed fit into a shirt pocket; i believe it's the smallest one available...
these stories sound really interesting... as i've mentioned, i was heavily into Zen some years ago, and wrote a lot of Haiku as a means of studying it... Japanese religious ideas are somewhat different as one might expect; i learned a lot and changed my personal world view quite a bit through a sort of unison of science fiction, geology and zen... your posts about Japanese lit have been educational and enlightening... tx....

RTD said...

I’d be lost with Kindle and iPad.
Note: there is a stage play of Rashomon ... when I was an undergraduate theater major, I performed the role of the rapist-bandit .... circa 1971 .... not type casting ....

Cleo @ Classical Carousel said...

My, you're reading some obscure books lately. It sounds interesting at least. As for Kindles, I really liked the convenience and how cheap everything is for those who read mainly classics. I have over 1000 books on mine and most of them were free. The problem is that I instinctively prefer books and tend to pick them up first. In fact, I don't even know where my Kindle is. :-Z AND I've been starting to see some studies that say retention from reading a physical book is much greater than reading from a screen.

Marian H said...

Really like your Kindle screensaver picture. And, I agree with everything else has been said re:e-readers...first I was a skeptic, but after I got my Nook, I was convinced. :)

This book sounds dark but intriguing. I want to read more Japanese literature so will keep it in mind!

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Brian. Moody and philosophical aptly describe these stories. Unfortunately, they reflect the author's temperament too well. He committed suicide at a young age.

I read about the movie and I'm interested in watching it. I heard that it combines the two stories.

You are far ahead of me in using your Kindle. I don't even know how to read the stories, except in order. If I lose my place, I have to go page by page to find it. I guess I need a tutorial.

Have a good week!

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Mudpuddle.

Well, like Brian, you are far ahead of me when it comes to using e-books. I was wondering what was the difference between them and what were the advantages or disadvantages to each. I'm on my 3rd Kindle, the other two died. This one is rather small, but it's good enough for me, although I really liked my last one because it was as big as a notebook.

Nice to know that you enjoyed the music. I could listen to this song over and over again.

I'm really on a Japanese tear right now. I guess because I haven't read much of their literature before. I love Haiku and that's so neat that you wrote it. I would think that was hard. Their poetry is quite beautiful. I hope to collect some more volumes of Japanese poetry in the near future.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Oh my goodness! I wish I could have seen it. You talk of type casting, and I'm glad you weren't, but my son, who is 6'2 and a body builder, got typecast while he was majoring in film. He got to be the "big bad wolf" in the guise of thug, or brute or every other bad guy. Even the big jerk of a boyfriend. I told him to get used to it.

Luckily, he mainly likes to make his own movies.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Cleo. You're right about the classics and I'm sure I have way more downloads on my Kindle than I'll read, just because it's so easy to click the "buy" button when it's free.

I still mainly use my Kindle for travel, but it is nice to be able to read in bed with the lights out (my husband falls asleep before me) just to put myself to sleep. It's a habit I picked up years ago. I have to read myself to sleep. I don't know how to relax otherwise.

That's interesting about the studies. I'd like to read more information on that. I own over 3000 books, not counting the ones on my Kindle, so I will not be giving them up any time soon.

Sharon Wilfong said...

I can say, that the stories reflect the author's melancholy and depressive nature. I wouldn't want a steady diet of it, but I am interested in Asian literature right now. They do seem to have a belief in fate that can be depressing, yet I do like to compare it and think how I would be if I was a stranger to God.

RTD said...

Hmmm .... you weren’t even born yet when I was in Rashomon ....

Sharon Wilfong said...

Oh, well....