- Cankaya University Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences
- Volume:9 Issue:1
- Is There a Way Out?: The Inhuman Politics of Noboru and His Gang in Yukio Mishima’s The Sailor Who F...
Is There a Way Out?: The Inhuman Politics of Noboru and His Gang in Yukio Mishima’s The Sailor Who Fell From Grace with the Sea
Authors : Merve AYDOĞDU
Pages : 157-164
View : 11 | Download : 7
Publication Date : 2012-02-01
Article Type : Research Paper
Abstract :“True beauty is something that attacks, overpowers, robs, and finally destroys.”1 Thus says Yukio Mishima, born in 1925 as Kimitake Hiraoka, the Japanese author. If this sentence is counted as the epitome of his philosophy of life, it will not be surprising to realize his fascination with sexuality, suicide, violence, and death in his works. He was the man of extreme passions; that is why it was hard to satisfy him. To quote by Cawthorne “In his autobiographical novel Confessions of a Mask, [Mishima] revealed that he was a man incapable of feeling passion or even feeling alive unless he was embroiled in sadomasochistic fantasy, dripping with blood and death. He said that he had written the book to channel his own homicidal instincts and the pen-name he chose- Yukio Mishima- could be written so that the characters also read ‘mysterious devil bewitched with death.Keywords : Inhuman, Politics, Noboru