A draft dodger's experiences during and following WWII stimulate a
searching criticism of the psychology of rebellion in this superb
1966 novel by the Japanese author of, among others, Singular
Rebellion (1990). Maruya observes protagonist Shokichi Hamada both
in 1945, when he eludes conscription and travels throughout his
country incognito, and 20 years later, when Hamada, who has renamed
himself Sugiura, works as a registry clerk at a prestigious small
university, attempts to recapture his discarded identity, and at
last pays the price for his dereliction from duty. Hamada's-and the
novel's-criticisms of Japanese militarism and emperor-worship are
indeed scathing. But the great achievement here is that these are
balanced by unrelenting analyses of the weaknesses in Hamada's
character, the further damage he has done to himself by living a
buried life, and his genuinely mixed feelings about his country and
culture and their claims on his allegiance. A masterly realistic
novel, and one of the best out of the Far East in many years.
(Kirkus Reviews)
First published in Japanese in 1966, the debut novel of the
critically acclaimed author of "Singular Rebellion" is an unusual
portrait of a deeply taboo subject in twentieth-century Japanese
society: resistance to the draft in World War II. In 1940 Shokichi
Hamada is a conscientious objector who dodges military service by
simply disappearing from society, taking to the country as an
itinerant peddler by the name of Sugiura until the end of the war
in 1945. In 1965, Hamada works as a clerk at a conservative
university, his war resistance a dark secret of the past that
present-day events force into the light, confronting him with
unexpected consequences of his refusal to conform twenty years
earlier.
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