is a major figure in contemporary Japanese literature. His works, strongly influenced by French and American literature and literary theory, engage with political, social and philosophical issues including nuclear weapons, social non-conformism and existentialism. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1994.
Oe was born in , a village now in Uchiko, Ehime Prefecture, Japan. He was one of seven children, whose father died when Oe was nine. At eighteen he began to study French literature at the University of Tokyo, where he wrote his dissertation on the work of Jean-Paul Sartre. He began publishing stories in 1957 while still a student, strongly influenced by contemporary writing in France and the United States.
He married in February of 1960, and later that year met Mao on a trip to China. He went to Russia and Europe the following year, visiting Sartre in Paris.
Oe now lives in Tokyo. He has three children; the eldest son, Hikari, has been brain-damaged since his birth in 1963, and his disability has been a recurring motif in Oe's writings since then.
Oe's output falls into a series of groups, successively dealing with different themes. After his first student works set in his own university milieu, in the late 1950s he produced several works (such as Prize Catch and Nip the Buds, Shoot the Kids) focussing on young children living in Arcadian transformations of Oe's own rural Shikoku childhood.Wilson, The Marginal World of Oe Kenzaburo: A Study in Themes and Techniques p. 12. M E Sharpe (1986). He later identified these child figures as belonging to the 'child god' archetype of Jung and Kerényi: one which is characterised by abandonment, hermaphrodism, invincibility, and association with beginning and end.Oe, The Method of a Novel p. 197. The first two characteristics are present in these early stories, while the latter two features come to the fore in the 'idiot boy' stories which appeared after the birth of Hikari.Wilson p. 135.
Between 1958 and 1961 Oe published a series of works incorporating sexual metaphors for the occupation of Japan. He summarised the common theme of these stories as, "the relationship of a foreigner as the big power a Japanese who is more or less placed in a humiliating position *" target="_blank" >(sometimes a prostitute who caters only to foreigners or an interpreter)".Oe, Supplement No. 3 to Oe Kenzaburo Zensakuhin, Vol. 2, Series I, p. 16. In each of these works, the Japanese X is inactive, failing to take the initiative to resolve the situation and showing no psychological or spiritual development.Wilson p. 32. The graphically sexual nature of this group of stories prompted a critical outcry; Oe said of the culmination of the series, Our Times, "I personally like this novel [because I do not think I will ever write another novel which is filled only with sexual words".Quoted in Wilson, p. 29.
Oe's next phase did move away from the earlier sexual content, shifting this time towards the violent fringes of society. The works which he published between 1961 and 1964 are influenced by existentialism and picaresque literature, populated with more or less criminal rogues and anti-heroes whose position on the fringes of society allows them to make pointed criticisms of it.Wilson p. 47.
Hikari was a strong influence on Father, Where are you Going?, Teach Us to Outgrow Our Madness, and The Day He Himself Shall Wipe My Tears Away, three novels which rework the same premise — the father of a disabled son attempts to recreate the life of his own father, who shut himself away and died. The protagonist's ignorance of his father is compared to his son's inability to understand him; the lack of information about his father's story makes the task impossible to complete, but capable of endless repetition, and, "repetition becomes the fabric of the stories". Wilson p. 61.
Teach Us to Outgrow Our Madness introduces 'Mori' as a name for the 'idiot-son' (Oe's own term); 'Mori' means both 'to die' and 'idiocy' in Latin, and 'forest' in Japanese. This association between the disabled boy and the forest recurs in later works such as The Waters Are Come in unto My Soul and M/T and the narrative about the marvels of the forest.
1935 births | Living people | Japanese novelists | Nobel Prize in Literature winners | People from Ehime Prefecture
Кендзабуро Ое | Kenzaburó Óe | Ōe Kenzaburō | Kenzaburō Ōe | Kenzaburō Ōe | 오에 겐자부로 | Kenzaburo Oe | Kenzaburō Ōe | ოე კენძაბურო | Kenzaburō Ōe | Óe Kendzaburó | Kenzaburo Oe | 大江健三郎 | Kenzaburo Oe | Kenzaburo Oe | Kenzaburo Oe | Oe Kenzaburo | Оэ, Кэндзабуро | Kenzaburo Oe | Kenzaburo Oe | Kenzaburo Oe | 大江健三郎
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Kenzaburo Oe".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world