Floating Clouds
«Lane Dunlop's superb translation of Fumiko Hayashi's most celebrated postwar novel presents a striking portrait of a woman struggling amidst the social dislocations of the era. Floating Clouds captures the sense of rupture that pervaded personal trajectories and reflects the capacity of individuals to reconstruct hope and meaning among the debris of broken dreams. -- Joan Ericson, Colorado College, author of Be a Woman: Hayashi Fumiko and Modern Japanese Women's Literature Floating Clouds, one of Fumiko Hayashi's late masterpieces, draws from the store of her own remarkable experiences in its depiction of the chaotic, uncertain, wounded worlds of postwar Japan. With a poignantly simple prose style, gracefully translated by Lane Dunlop, she captures the tumult of the time, the arrogance of colonialism, and the impotence of defeat. -- Rebecca Copeland, Washington University in St. Louis, author of Lost Leaves: Women Writers of Meiji Japan The novel effectively conveys the troubling ramifications of the Japanese occupation of Indochina during World War II. Library Journal It is fitting that [Dunlop] give us this important novel in its first trustworthy and readable English edition. The Japan Times A remarkable book. -- Scott Bryan Wilson Rain Taxi A sprawling portrait of Japan just after the end of World War II... Lane Dunlop's translation is excellent. -- Janine Beichman The Japan Journal [A] powerful and moving work. -- M.A.Orthofer The Complete Review»
In this groundbreaking novel, Fumiko Hayashi tells the powerful story of tormented love and one woman's struggle to navigate the cruel realities of postwar Japan. The novel's characters, particularly its resilient heroine Koda Yukiko, find themselves trapped in their own drifting, unable to break out of the morass of indecisiveness. Les mer
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Yukiko meets Tomioka while working as a typist for the Japanese ministry in Indochina, where they begin their affair. After the war, Tomioka returns to his wife but remains emotionally inscrutable to Yukiko, refusing to break off their relationship. Meanwhile, Yukiko must find her way in a radically changed postwar Japan. When Yukiko and Tomioka's lives once again cross, the two set down a path shaped by their passion and sense of desperation. First published in 1951, Floating Clouds is a classic of modern Japanese literature and was later made into a film by legendary Japanese director Mikio Naruse.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Columbia University Press
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- ISBN
- 9780231136297
- Utgivelsesår
- 2012
- Format
- 22 x 14 cm
Anmeldelser
«Lane Dunlop's superb translation of Fumiko Hayashi's most celebrated postwar novel presents a striking portrait of a woman struggling amidst the social dislocations of the era. Floating Clouds captures the sense of rupture that pervaded personal trajectories and reflects the capacity of individuals to reconstruct hope and meaning among the debris of broken dreams. -- Joan Ericson, Colorado College, author of Be a Woman: Hayashi Fumiko and Modern Japanese Women's Literature Floating Clouds, one of Fumiko Hayashi's late masterpieces, draws from the store of her own remarkable experiences in its depiction of the chaotic, uncertain, wounded worlds of postwar Japan. With a poignantly simple prose style, gracefully translated by Lane Dunlop, she captures the tumult of the time, the arrogance of colonialism, and the impotence of defeat. -- Rebecca Copeland, Washington University in St. Louis, author of Lost Leaves: Women Writers of Meiji Japan The novel effectively conveys the troubling ramifications of the Japanese occupation of Indochina during World War II. Library Journal It is fitting that [Dunlop] give us this important novel in its first trustworthy and readable English edition. The Japan Times A remarkable book. -- Scott Bryan Wilson Rain Taxi A sprawling portrait of Japan just after the end of World War II... Lane Dunlop's translation is excellent. -- Janine Beichman The Japan Journal [A] powerful and moving work. -- M.A.Orthofer The Complete Review»