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    The Sound of the MountainBy Yasunari Kawabata

    Adam Steinberger Oral #

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    The Sound of the Mountain, by Yasunari Kawabata, tells the story of an old

    Japanese man named Ogata Shingo and his relationships with his family. The novel is set

    in and around Tokyo during the post World War II era. We watch as Shingo battles

    approaching old age and dementia, along with its ensuing inertia and fading sexuality.

    His family is disintegrating around him, much as his country did during the war. Times

    are changing. The old ways are dying. Shingo faces these truths daily, often with great

    difficulty.

    Shingo lives with his wife, Yasuko, in the ancient Buddhist city of Kamakura,

    outside of Tokyo. As is typical of the times, his son Shuichi and daughter-in-law Kikuko

    live with them in the family home. Both Shuichi and Shingo work together in an office

    in Tokyo and often commute back and forth by train together. At the beginning of the

    novel, Shingos daughter, Fusako, lives in the nearby countryside with her husband and

    two small children. Both of his children have very shaky marriages. This troubles

    Shingo, who feels it is his role as family patriarch to fix his childrens marriages. But old

    age and its inertia make it difficult for him to act. Furthermore, it is clear that Shingo

    possesses much stronger feelings for his daughter-in-law than for his own children or his

    wife. These feelings for Kikuko range from paternal love to a smoldering lust.

    As the book opens, Shingo hears the sound of the mountain near his home one

    evening. Kikuko reminds him that this is not the first time he has heard this sound. She

    tells him of the time he heard it just before his wifes sister, Shinano died. Shingo lusted

    for Shinano in a way that he had never done for his wife, Yasuko. He now wonders what

    death is responsible for making the mountain sound again. Could it be his own death?

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    Many of his old friends have died or are ill and dying. Death is often on Shingos mind

    these days.

    One day when Shingo is coming home from work, he notices his neighbors

    sunflowers are as big as human heads and have petalsgolden, like women. The

    sunflowers represent two ways in which Shingo tries to preserve himself from the decay

    around him. These are the strengths of nature and sexual desire. Shingo often immerses

    himself in both the natural beauty around him and his own sexual fantasies to escape the

    stresses of his life. Soon after noticing these wonderful sunflowers, a typhoon hits his

    home town. When the storm ends, Shingo sees that the sunflowers have all been

    decapitated and are dead. When Shingo sees these decapitated sunflower heads he

    reveals to us his own fear of old age, decay and death.

    In addition to his fear of death and dying, Shingo must confront the troubles and

    decay within his family. He fears that his son, Shuichi, has a lover and is destroying his

    marriage to Kikuko. Shingo loves Kikuko and cannot bear seeing her suffer. He also

    feels that it is his place in the old paternal Japanese culture to keep his family united and

    flourishing. Shingo asks his secretary Eiko about Shuichis lover. Her name is Kinuko,

    and Eiko takes Shingo to Kinukos house. However, once there Shingo turns back, afraid

    of what he might learn.

    Several days later, a friend gives Shingo two Noh masks. Noh is Japans oldest

    theatrical art form. The all-male actors wear the different masks to dramatize different

    things, including the gods, devils and historical events. Shingo has Eiko wear the jido

    mask, which represents a young male child. Later that night, Shingo believes that the

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    jido mask is coming alive and goes to kiss it. This makes him uneasy and causes him to

    think that something is about to shake his household.

    On New Years Day, Eiko stops by the Ogata house to tell Shingo that she must

    quit work. She tells the aging man some of the horrific things Shuichi does when with

    his lover, Kinuko. One example of Shuichis cruelty is when he forces Kinuko to sing for

    him and beats her when she does not. Shingo is outraged at Shuichis behavior. He feels

    he must put an end to his sons affair. He visits Kinuko, a war bride whose husband

    was killed during World War II. She has left their husbands family to work and live

    independently. Kinuko is pregnant. But she assures Shingo that the affair is over and

    that the child is not Shuichis child. Shingo gives her money for her needs and leaves.

    He knows he should do more. He is sure that the baby is Shuichis and that he should

    convince Kinuko to end the pregnancy. But she is determined to have the baby and

    Shingo simply lets matters drop.

    A few nights later, Shingo awakens to the sound of groaning outside at the front

    gate. He sees Shuichi drunk and leaning on the gate. He lets Kikuko care for her

    drunken husband. The next morning he finds that she has comforted Shuichi and

    forgiven him. He is relieved that Kikuko and Shuichi are apparently working on their

    marriage. However, Shingo then remembers a dream that he had about a girl who had an

    abortion. Shingo thinks that this dream is a foreshadowing of something in his own

    family. Soon Shingo learns that Kikuko has just had an abortion, not wanting to bring a

    baby into an unhappy marriage. Shingo blames Shuichi, saying that he has destroyed her

    spirit. Killing the baby was like an act of suicide for Kikuko. Shingo laments the fact

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    Kawabatas lonely and death-obsessed writing. Originally, Yasunari wanted to become an

    artist. But by his second year of middle school, he was determined to be a writer. Kawabatas

    first published writing, Carrying My Teachers Coffin on My Shoulder, appeared in a small

    magazine called Danranin 1915. In 1920, he entered the English Literature Department of

    the Tokyo Imperial University. Kawabata did not find his studies in this department

    satisfying, so he transferred to the Department of Japanese Literature, where he focused his

    studies on literary criticism. This gave him a rich background in Japanese literature.

    Once out of college, Kawabata and his friend, Tokomitsu Riichi founded a journal

    called Contemporary Literature. Kawabata published his first successful novel, The Izu Dancer, in

    this journal in April 1926. In 1931, Kawabata married and the couple moved to the city of

    Kamakura, on the foothills of Mt. Fuji. Throughout Kawabatas career, he wrote a number

    of serial novels. Serial novels are novels that are submitted in parts to newspapers and

    magazines. In 1935, Yasunari began writingSnow Countryand published the finalized copy in

    1948. In 1949, Yasunari Kawabata began writing Thousand Cranes and The Sound of the

    Mountain, which was published in 1954. Kawabata published several more novels, over the

    next eleven years.

    In the 1960s, Yasunari Kawabata toured the United States, giving lectures at U.S.

    colleges. Kawabata became friends with Mishima Yukio. In 1968, Yasunari Kawabata won

    the Nobel Prize for Literature. The three books cited by the Nobel Committee were Snow

    Country, Thousand Cranes, and The Old Capital. In Kawabatas acceptance speech he talked of

    suicide, perhaps foreshadowing his own death.

    In 1970, Yasunaris friend, Mishima Yukio committed seppuku, the act of killing

    oneself in honor of the emperor. Two years later, Yasunari Kawabata committed suicide. On

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    April 16, 1972, he gassed himself in the city of Zushi, leaving no note behind; a sad end to a

    great Japanese writer and well-known literary critic.

    The setting ofThe Sound of the Mountain takes place during the post-WWII era in

    Japan. But the influences on this time period go back to the mid 1800s in Japan. In 1868,

    the Meiji Restoration took place. During the Meiji Restoration the imperial house regained

    power in Japan with the enthronement of Emperor Mutsuhito. For hundreds of years, the

    shoguns, who were military rulers, had power over the emperors in Japan. The Meiji

    restoration of power to the emperor held great significance for Japan.

    One of the Meiji Restorations biggest impacts on politics was the abolishment of

    feudalism. In 1877, the last samurai rebellion was fought in Satsuma and eventually put

    down by the government. This completed the transition from feudal to imperial Japan. The

    first thing the new imperial government of Japan had to do was create a new government

    framework, or constitution, to replace the old framework. In 1890, this constitution was put

    into effect. The constitution had a bill of rights and it could be amended. It also gave the

    ruler the power to command the army and dissolve the lower house, which is in many ways

    like a parliament.

    The first Sino-Japanese war took place from 1894 to 1895. Korea asked China for

    help in crushing a rebellion. Not wanting Chinese dominance over Korea, Japan also sent

    troops to Korea. Once the rebellion was put down neither the Chinese nor the Japanese

    troops would leave Korea. This started a war between Japan and China over supremacy in

    Korea. Japanese forces won. Korea became independent, and Japan emerged as a major

    world power. The peace treaty also gave Japan special trade opportunities.

    War broke out again in 1904, when the Russo-Japanese war began. This war was

    fought to prevent Russian expansionism, and was successful in doing so. However, in 1910

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    Korea was annexed by Japan. During World War I, Japan sided with the Allies based on its

    alliance with Britain. Also during WWI Japan demanded special privileges in China,

    including free access to parts of Mongolia and Manchuria for mining and shipping. After

    World War I, in 1921, Japan joined the League of Nations. And in 1928 Japan signed the

    Kellogg-Briand Pact agreeing to renounce war.

    The Great Depression during the 1930s brought economic disaster to Japan. The

    idea of militarism, the belief that military conquest could stabilize the economy, became

    popular around this time. With militarism popular and after fighting a war to stop Russian

    expansionism, Japan entered its period of expansionism.

    In 1928, the ruler of Manchuria, Chang Tso-lin, was assassinated. In 1931, the

    Japanese Kwantung army, who guarded the Southern Manchurian railway, claimed that

    China attempted to bomb a train in Manchuria. This incident was called the Mukden

    Incident, and it allowed the Kwantung to seize control of Manchuria. Since the Japanese,

    wanted control over Manchuria, this triggered Japanese aggression in Asia. Five years later,

    Japan signed the Anti-Comintern Pact along with Germany and Italy. This pact formed

    alliances between the three countries. The pact brought Japan into the Second World War.

    The following year, Japan warred with China after a fight near Beijing. In 1941, Japan

    attacked American fleets at Pearl Harbor, and in the following year, at the Battle of Midway,

    America took out four Japanese aircraft carriers. America then showed its unbreakable

    strength when it dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. This paralyzed

    Japans expansionism and brought an end to the Pacific war.

    From 1945 to 1952, the Allies occupied Japan. In the Potsdam Declaration of 1945,

    The Supreme Commander for Allied Powers (SCAP) dismantled the Japanese military. The

    Potsdam Declaration also removed the government in Japan and gave the Japanese people

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    individual rights. SCAP also redesigned the Japanese economy, and took the liberty to

    disband State Shintoism. On May 3, 1947, MacArthurs new constitution was put into effect.

    It made Japan a democracy, and included a 31-amendment Bill of Rights. In the Bill of

    Rights, war was denounced as a right of the state and the emperor was denoted as nothing

    more than a symbol of the state. Previously, the emperor was thought to be a descendant

    of the Sun Goddess.

    To promote economic success in post-war Japan, SCAP forced landlords to give a

    large percentage of their land to the government. This land was then sold to tenant farmers.

    This not only created a stronger economy, but also stopped post-war inflation. Legislation

    was passed to prevent the return of economically degenerating monopolies. Further laws

    were enacted that resembled the New Deal in the United States. Education was also

    reformed. Free and better education programs were set in action to instill democracy into

    the future generations of Japanese and to promote the necessity of being a well-educated

    nation.

    Finally, on April 28, 1952, the Occupation ended and Japan was allowed independent

    rule. A new era of great economic and social growth took place between 1952 and 1973.

    During this time, Japan experienced urbanization, economic expansion and population

    growth. Into the 1970s and 80s, Japans industries became international and the economy

    boomed. New advances in technology caused Japan to become one of the leading industrial

    nations of the modern world.

    The theme ofThe Sound of the Mountainis that a persons true self is often masked by

    his/her daily occupations and responsibilities, and is only revealed under certain

    circumstances. For Ogata Shingo, these certain circumstances often occur when he is

    observing or interacting with nature, and when he is alone with Kikuko. Throughout the

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    novel, Shingo never really shows himself. He simply observes the things happening around

    him and continues on, unable to change anything. But when Shingo meets Kikuko at the

    Shinjuku Garden, he makes a complete transformation. Here, being with Kikuko in such a

    beautiful, natural environment allows Shingo to show his emotions and true feelings. This

    theme is expanded when Mr. Ogata receives two Noh masks from a friend. Shingo stares at

    thejido mask, which represents a young male child. He watches as the mask comes alive and

    he is transformed by this. He immediately feels a great sexual urge to kiss the mask. But

    when the spell is over, he is uneasy about the event. The Noh mask represents the daily

    occurrences and responsibilities that maskShingos true self and true feelings. In addition,

    the Noh mask symbolizes Shingos longing for youth and love. Shingo longs to kiss the

    mask, but never does. He realizes he will never be young again and supposes that sexual

    love for him is over, too.

    An additional symbol occurs when Shingo hears a roar that seems to come directly

    from Mt. Fuji. The last time he heard the sound of the mountain was just before Yasukos

    sister died. It is obvious that this sound symbolizes death. Another symbol that represents

    death is the typhoon that strikes and destroys the sunflowers that Shingo admires. The

    sunflowers, which look to Shingo like human heads, are symbols of youth. The storm,

    symbolic of the death and decay associated with life, brings an end to youth.

    Another symbol is revealed when Shingo notices two tall pine trees in a grove he

    passes by on the train to work. They were leaning toward each other as if about to

    embrace. According to traditional Japanese symbolism, these two pines symbolize love and

    fidelity. Both are very important to Shingo.

    Two examples of the use of irony include the fact that Shingo feels more love and

    lust for Kikuko than her husband Shuichi does. It is also ironic that both Shuichis wife and

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    mistress are pregnant, but his wife has an abortion while the mistress does not. Finally,

    Shuichi is the perfect foil for Shingo. He is the opposite of Shingo in many ways. Shuichi is

    a more modern man who does not follow the old cultural ways. He leaves his wife and

    family alone to spend his free time with his mistress. Shingo, however, respects the old

    ways. He has no mistress and is loyal and respectful to his wife, even though he feels no lust

    for her anymore. He works to hold his family together rather than pulling it apart as Shuichi

    does.

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    Works Cited

    Books:

    Breuilly, Elizabeth, Joanne OBrien, and Martin Palmer. Religions of the World: TheIllustrated Guide to Origins, Beliefs, Traditions & Festivals. New York: Facts on File, Inc.,1997.

    Galvin, Irene Flum. Japan: A Modern Land with Ancient Roots. New York: BenchmarkBooks, 1996.

    Geography Department.Japanin Pictures. Minneapolis: Lerner Publications Company,1989.

    Joly, Henri L. Legend in Japanese Art. Rutland: Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1967.

    Keene, Donald. 5 Modern Japanese Novelists. New York: Columbia University Press, 2003.

    Noma, Seiroku. The Arts of Japan: Ancient and Medieval. Tokyo: Kodansha InternationalLtd., 1966.

    Petersen, Gwenn Boardman. The Moon in the Water: Understanding Tanizaki, Kawabata,and Mishima. Honolulu: The University Press of Hawaii, 1979.

    Stanley-Baker, Joan. Japanese Art. London: Thames and Hudson Ltd., 1984.

    Encyclopedias:

    Japan.The Encyclopdia Britannica. 11th ed. 1991.

    Images:

    1 Mar 2006 .

    Websites:

    1945.Thinkquest.org. 1998. ThinkQuest. 27 Feb 2006.

    Anglo-Japanese Alliance. Encyclopdia Britannica. 2006. Encyclopdia Britannica OnlineSchool Edition. 26 Jan 2006 .

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    Blacker, Carmen. Shinto and the Sacred Dimension of Nature. Shinto.org. 2003.International Shinto Foundation. 26 Jan 2006 .

    Delahunt, Michael. P-Par.ArtLex. 1996-2006. ArtLex Art Dictionary. 1 Mar 2006

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    Yasunari Kawabata (1899-1972). 2002. Books and Writers. 26 Jan 2006.