内容紹介
This eloquent work on the Japanese sense of beauty explores the subtle interplay of shade and light in several important aspects of Japanese life architecture, drama, food, femininity, and literature and traces the retreat of this mature, shadowy aesthetic tradition before the brighter, more garish products of Western technology.
Junichiro Tanizaki, one of the most eloquent Japanese novelists, leads readers through “darkness seen by candlelight” replete with a “pregnancy of particles like fine ashes, each particle as luminous as a rainbow.” His flowing, wandering meditation cannot fail to delight all lovers of the traditions of the East.
Originally published in 1933 and 1934, In Praise of Shadows presents readers with Tanizaki’s obvious love for the traditions for which his country is renown and provided a prescient warning of the dangers those traditions face.
著者について
Junichiro Tanizaki (1886-1964), widely considered one of Japan’s finest modern writers, was born in the heart of Tokyo. He studied Japanese literature at Tokyo Imperial University. After the earthquake of 1923, he moved to the more cultured Kyoto-Osaka region. His most important novels and stories, many reflecting his taste for sexual perversity, his eye for social comedy, and his bitter humor, were written after his move. He received the Imperial Prize for Literature in 1949.