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Embracing Family
Embracing Family | Nobuo Kojima
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Set during the U.S. Occupation following World War II, Embracing Family is a novel of conflict--between Western and Eastern traditions, between a husband and wife, between ideals and reality. At the opening of the book, Miwa Shunsuke and his wife are trapped in a strained marriage, subtly attacking one another in a manner similar to that of the characters in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? When his wife has an affair with an American GI, Miwa is forced to come to terms with the disintegration of their relationship and the fact that his attempts to repair it only exacerbate the situation. An award-winning novel, critics have read this book as a metaphor of postwar Japanese society, in which the traditional moral and philosophical basis of Japanese culture is neglected in favor of Western conventions.
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Dilara
Embracing Family | Nobuo Kojima
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The novel was very Bovary-like at the start (but more sexually frank & set in 60s Japan), and then it veered into a different territory. It is centered on a (upper?) middle-class man, & his behaviour towards his dissatisfied (then dying, then dead) wife, children, maids & others. It was all v. alien to me. The book's blurb is misleading: it's mostly about dysfunctional relationships & not about the Westernisation of Japan.

Dilara photo is a still of Night and Fog in Japan (Nagisa Oshima, 1960) 4mo
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