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Saturday 4 December 2021

The Briefcase - Hiromi Kawakami

 Second contemporary Japanese female writer.  Story of the development of a hesitant relationship between a woman and her former teacher, who meet by accident in a bar.  Sensei is 25 to 30 years older than her.  Like Yashimoto's book, there is a dominant theme of female character's alienation and sense of not belonging within the general society.  The story can also be interpreted as a look at people within society who do not fit the accepted molds or roles.  Given the amount of time characters spend getting drunk in the book, there is also a sense that the society as a whole is quite repressed and strained, and alcohol is used to loosen the strictures imposed by social norms. 

I also see traces of Murakami's influence in this book, with strange surrealistic sequences as part of the narrative.  In this book however, the surrealistic elements are presented as dreams of the characters. 

The Lake - Banana Yoshimoto

 Contemporary Japanese woman author.

Strange little book about an alienated young woman drifting through her life, having recently moved to Tokyo.  Also includes a male character who was traumatized by his childhood in a strange religious cult. 

Currently, Japanese women authors are getting a lot of attention/publication.  I am interested in looking at why:  what themes, commonalities?

So far, I am guessing they are writing as a group that has been marginalized in Japanese male-oriented society.  Not so much looking for their place, but expressing their feeling of alienation living within the strictures of the dominant social structure.