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Avant-garde novelist and playwright who represented the outsider
in the Japanese literary world of the 1960s and 1970s. Central themes
in Abe's works are the loss of identity, alienation and isolation
of the individual in a strange world, and the difficulty people
have in communicating with one another. In the West Abe is best-known
for his novels, such as The Woman in the Dunes (1962) and The Face
of Another (1964).
"What were you looking at?"
"A window."
"No, no. I mean what were you looking at through the window?"
"Windows... lots of windows. One by one the lights are going off.
That's the only instant you really know somebody's there."
(from The Ruined Map, 1967)
Abe
was born in Tokyo, but he grew up in Mukden in Japanese-occupied
Manchuria, where his father, a physician, was on the staff of the
medical school. As a young man Abe was interested in mathematics
and insect collecting as well as the works of the philosophers Heidegger,
Jaspers and Nietzsche. In 1941 Abe moved to Japan and entered in
1943 the University of Tokyo, to study medicine. Abe was exempted
from military service because of respiratory illness. He returned
during the war to Manchuria, but after repatriation Abe continued
his studies and graduated in 1948, with the promise that he would
never practice. Instead Abe started his career as a writer. He became
a member of a literary group led by Kiyoteru Hamada. They were committed
to the goal of fusing the techniques of Surrealism with Marxist
ideology. Abe's writing, often stiff and formal, reflected his preoccupation
with ideas rather than stylistic techniques.
His first book, Abe had actually written in 1943, and in 1947 he
had published at his own expense a collection of poems. Abe established
his reputation the next year with the novel OWARISHI MICHI NO SHIRUBE
NI. Important writers for his own artistic development were Edgar
Allan Poe, Samuel Beckett, Rainer Maria Rilke and Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
"Actually, binoculars, if used in a certain way, give the
effect of X ray. For instance, you can read more expressions and
characteristics from a single photo of a given person than you
can by meeting him face to face."
(from The Ruined Map)
Abe's
experimental works first gained popularity among the younger generation
of readers. He received prizes for his three stories, 'Akai mayu'
(1950, Red Cocoon), 'Kabe' (1951), and 'S. Karuma-shi
no hanzai' (1951). In the last mentioned, the style and subject
matter are reminiscent of Kafka. Among Abe's novels are DAIYON KAMPYOKI
(1959), TANIN NO KAO (1964), MOETSUKITA CHIZU (1967), MIKKAI (1977),
a surrealistic detective story about an unidentified man searching
for his wife at a hospital, and HAKO OTAKO (1973), in which the
protagonist cuts a peephole in an empty cardboard carton, places
the box over his head, and walks away from his anxieties. SUNA NA
ONNA (1962, Woman in the Dunes) was a kafkaesque story of a schoolteacher,
who is imprisoned in a bizarre village on a holiday expedition.
He accepts shelter from a woman who lives alone in a house, which
is in danger of being buried by massive sand dunes that threaten
to bury the whole community. The schoolteacher is pressed to help,
to shovel the eternally increasing sand, but when a chance to escape
comes, he refuses to take advantage of it.
Abe also wrote several plays and directed his own theatre company
in Tokyo. In his plays the themes of solitude and alienation were
dealt with in a similar way as in the theatre of the absurd and
the works of Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter. With the death of
Yukio Mishima Abe gained the status as major dramatist in the 1970s.
In Friends (1967) the apartment of an office worker is invaded
by a family that take control of his life and finally he is killed
by one of the daughters. Although the members of the family claim
to be devoting themselves to social good, their actions are cruelly
destructive. The Suitcase (1973) depicts two women who worry
over the contents of a suitcase said to contain the ancestors of
the husband of one of the women.
Abe's novels and plays are characterized by clinical observations,
scientific nomenclature, and avant-garde techniques. Many of his
works have been turned into films under the direction of Teshigahara
Hiroshi. Abe died on January 22, 1993.
Dai-Yon Kampyoki (1959, Inter Ice Age 4) - A complex story
set in a future Japan threatened by the melting of polar icecaps.
The protagonist, professor Katsumi, has developed a computer program
that predicts the creation of genetically engineered children,
who are adapted for life in the rising seas. The computer has
also found out that Katsumi will oppose this progress and his
unborn child is enlisted into the ranks of the mutated water-breathers.
The story explores the concept of free will and the moral questions
of scientific research.
For further reading: Crisis in Identity and Contemporary
Japanese Novels by A. Kimball (1973); Approaches to the Modern
Japanese Novel, eds. by K. Tsuruta and T.E. Swann (1976); Modern
Japanese Fiction and Its Traditions by J.T. Rimer (1978); The
Search for Authenticity in Modern Japanese Literature by H. Yamanouchi
(1978); Fake Fish by N.K. Shields (1966); Encyclopaedia of World
Literature in the 20th Century, ed. by Dteven R. Serafin (1999,
vol. 1)
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Selected bibliography:
- Mumei shishu, 1947
- Owarishi michi no shirube ni, 1948 - The Road Sign at the End
of the Street
- Ueta hifu, 1952
- Kiga domei, 1954
- Kabe atsuki heya, 1954
- Aru rokuju-ni go no hatsumei, 1956
- Moken no kokoro ni keisanki no te o, 1957
- Kemono-tachi wa kokyo-o mesasu, 1957
- Too o yuku, 1957
- Bo ni Natta Otoko, 1957-69 - The Man Who Turned into a Stick
(three short plays)
- Hakareru kiroku, 1958
- Dai-Yon Kampyoki, 1959 - Inter Ice Age 4 - suom. Välijääkausi
4
- Yurei wa koko ni iru, 1959
- Tomodachi, 1959 (play) - Friends - suom. Ystävät
- Ishi no me, 1960
- Suna na onna, 1962 - The Woman in the Dunes - suom. Hiekkaa
- film 1963, dir. by Hiroshi Teshigahara
- Tanin no kao, 1964 - The Face of Another - film adaptation,
dir. by Hiroshi Teshigahara
- Toki no gake, 1964 - The Cliff of Time
- Mukankei na shi, 1964
- Moetsukita chizu, 1967 - The Ruined Map
- Tomodachi, 1967 - Friends
- Bo ni natta otoko, 1969 - The Man Who Turned into a Stick
- Abe Kobo-shu, 1970
- Abe Kobo gikyoku zenshu, 1970
- Abe Kobo zen-sakuhin, 1972-1973 (15 vols.)
- Four Stories by Kobo Abe, 1973
- Hako otoko, 1973 - The Suitcase / The Box Man
- Mikkai, 1977 - Secret Rendezvous
- Warau tsuki, 1978
- Hakobune sakura maru, 1984 - The Art of Sakura
- Kangaru noto, 1991 - Kangaroo Notebook
- Beyond the Curve, 1991 (transl. Juliet Carpenter)
- Three Plays, 1993
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This biography was written by Petri Liukkonen.
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