An edition of Grotesque (2007)

Grotesque

1st American ed.
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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 22, 2019 | History
An edition of Grotesque (2007)

Grotesque

1st American ed.
  • 0 Ratings
  • 8 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 1 Have read

In the wake of the brutal murders of two Tokyo prostitutes, Yuriko and Kazue, Yuriko's older sister describes the three women's education at a prestigious girls' high school, where a strict societal conventions determine the courses of their lives.

Publish Date
Publisher
Alfred A. Knopf
Language
English
Pages
467

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Grotesque
Grotesque
2007, Alfred A. Knopf
in English - 1st American ed.

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Book Details


Published in

New York, N.Y

Table of Contents

A chart of phantom children
A cluster of naked seed plants
A natural-born whore : Yuriko's diary
World without love
My crimes : Zhang's written report
Fermentation and decay
Jizo of desire : Kazue's journals
Sounds of the waterfall in the distance : the last chapter.

Edition Notes

"A Borzoi book."

"Originally published ... in Japan as Gurotesku by Bungei Shunju in 2003"--T.p. verso.

Also issued online.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
895.6/35
Library of Congress
PL855.I566 G8713 2007

The Physical Object

Pagination
467 p. ;
Number of pages
467

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL24746851M
Internet Archive
grotesque00kiri
ISBN 10
1400044944, 1400096596
ISBN 13
9781400044948, 9781400096596
LCCN
2006048594
OCLC/WorldCat
70676629

Work Description

It concerns the relationship between three girls, how they grow up, the pressures they are subject to, and how they turn out. They are all three more or less desperate and unpleasant, in different ways. They all three turn in the end to prostitution, two of them being murdered.

It is not so much a crime novel, though it is positioned and marketed as that, as a very dark view of the role of women in relation to men and to men's sexual desire. All the men in the book treat the women purely as objects of sexual gratification. The men are seen entirely from outside, they are strange driven creatures, with little or no humanity. The women, from girlhood onwards, are defined by their response to desire and by their power to evoke it. Which fades with the years, of course.

The view of men is not simply of Japanese men in Japanese society - the main protagonists in the early part of the book are European, and this account of men as aliens characterises them whether in Europe or in Japan.

Japanese society is seen also from the point of view of the women - its oppressive, arbitrary, and places them in a powerless and importunate position. They don't seem to form friendships or relations of affection, they are in continual relations of competition and dislike for each other. The men in the workplace are not simply sexually driven in this incomprehensible way, but are also totally powerful authority figures.

One of the girls characterises herself as a nymphomaniac, is possessed by desire too and gratifies with anyone on any occasion.

All the characters are unpleasant and unfeeling - there is a sort of universal casual cruelty about all interactions, a complete lack of any human feeling or affection. It is very consistent with the prevailing tone that there are suicides and murders, and that the characters react to these with a complete lack either of shock or feeling. It is as if these are simply the expression of what is going on every day at a less violent level.

Its a view of a society in which personal alienation is total. The characters are so far removed from what we would consider normal human feelings for each other that the possibility of such feelings does not even occur to them. It is a world in which one makes ones own way with everyone's hand against one. In the school, which occupies quite a large part of the narrative, there are cliques and rituals of belonging and discrimination. The prestigious clique is seen from the outside as forming a unit with its own rules. There is however no analysis of it. It is entirely done from the point of view of those outside it.

It is a striking account, though not very pleasant reading, and after about a third of it, and you realise this is how it is going to be all the way through, it ceases to interest. In the end the author fails in the way that James notes Flaubert's failure. If you are going to tell a story from the point of view of, and through the eyes of, a character, then that character has to have a level of understanding which will illuminate events. They don't have to be sympathetic, but they do have to shed some light. Otherwise it simply turns into a very restricted view of the world through an uninteresting consciousness, and one ends up just wanting it to stop. It is like a long visit with someone whose view of the world, endlessly repeated, is petty and malicious and paranoid.

You can probably tell I am not going to finish this, or to try to read anything more by this writer. The subject, the way in which social convention and structure affects personal relations, particular men and women's relations, and the different role of sexual passion in the sexes, is important and interesting. But the author, though capable of seeing the theme and attempting to write about it, in the end proves incapable of even portraying it in the round, let alone illuminating it in any humanly interesting way.

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
July 22, 2019 Edited by MARC Bot remove fake subjects
August 12, 2011 Edited by ImportBot add ia_box_id to scanned books
July 8, 2011 Created by ImportBot Imported from Internet Archive item record.