Yukio Mishima
By (Author) Damian Flanagan
Reaktion Books
Reaktion Books
1st November 2014
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Biography: arts and entertainment
Individual film directors, film-makers
895.635
Paperback
224
Width 130mm, Height 200mm
Yukio Mishima was the most internationally acclaimed Japanese author of the twentieth century: prodigiously talented, dazzlingly prolific and a prime candidate for the Nobel Prize. Yet in 1970 Mishima shocked the world with a bizarre attempt at a coup d'etat, which ended in his suicide by ritual disembowelment. In his radically new analysis of an extraordinary life, Damian Flanagan moves away from the stereotypical depiction of Mishima as a right-wing nationalist and aesthete and presents him as a man utterly obsessed with time - time-keeping devices and symbols - arguing that this compulsion was at the heart of the author's literature and life. This book untangles the frequent distortions in the writer's memoirs, which have often been taken at face value, and traces the evolution of Mishima's attempts to master and transform both his sexuality and artistic persona.
"A fine introduction to the life and times of Yukio Mishima, the most internationally acclaimed Japanese author and playwright of the twentieth century. . . . Flanagan is willing to tread where others have been more guarded and pulls few punches while analysing Mishima's character. . . a thoughtful and engaging re-evaluation. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in Mishima, Japanese literature, modern history, psychology, and queer studies." -- "Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies"
"An excellent introduction to Mishima's life and work . . . Flanagan provides deft plot summaries and sensitive readings of Mishima's fiction and deploys a wide array of Japanese sources currently unavailable in English, producing a rich portrait of this very strange and complicated man." -- "Gay and Lesbian Review"
"For the Japanese, Mishima and his beliefs were 'grotesque anachronism.' . . . This biography demonstrates, however, that aspects of Mishima's life deserve celebration: his command of the language, his development of a Japanese drama, short story, and the confessional genre, . . . and his dovtion to and attempt to capture beauty--both in person and in writing."-- "Times Literary Supplement"
"Part of the originality of Flanagan's latest work rests in its approach to time, the author contending that a unique approach to the temporal was a key factor in Mishima's life and death. . . . Flanagan's stylishly written literary biography comes closer than most to understanding the enigma of Yukio Mishima." -- "Japan Times"
Damian Flanagan is an award-winning author and translator who has published a number of books on Japanese literature, including Natsume Soseki: Superstar of World Literature (2007). He has also written widely on Japanese politics, arts and society for publications including Newsweek and the Nihon Keizai Shinbun.